Consumer tech and online safety updates worth watching right now

EU Says No to Apple’s Siri AI Exemption: What It Means for Your iPhone and Privacy European regulators have rejected Apple’s request to exempt its upcoming Siri AI features from the Digital Markets Act (DMA). The decision, reported on June 9, 2026, means that Apple cannot bypass the bloc’s competition rules for the new AI-powered version of Siri. For iPhone users in Europe, this has direct consequences: some AI features may be delayed or altered, but it also reinforces certain privacy protections built into the DMA. Here’s what happened and why it matters. ...

June 10, 2026 · 4 min · BriefArc Desk

Why Judges Are Banning AI During Discovery — and What It Means for Your Privacy

Why Judges Are Banning AI During Discovery — and What It Means for Your Privacy If you are involved in a lawsuit, you may assume that using artificial intelligence to sort through documents saves time and money. But a growing number of judges are putting that assumption aside. In recent months, several courts have issued orders explicitly prohibiting the use of AI tools during the discovery phase of litigation. The reason? Privacy risks that, in some cases, could expose confidential information to third parties or even the public. ...

June 8, 2026 · 4 min · BriefArc Desk

Privacy risks to watch and simple ways to protect yourself

Privacy risks to watch and simple ways to protect yourself If you’ve asked an AI assistant for help with an email, a recipe, or even sensitive health advice, you’ve probably wondered what happens to that conversation afterward. You are not alone in that concern. In a recent interview with Spiceworks, the CEO of Proton — the company behind ProtonMail and ProtonVPN — said that privacy in the AI era is possible, but one thing keeps him up at night: the lack of transparency and control over how AI companies handle user data. ...

June 8, 2026 · 4 min · BriefArc Desk

Privacy in the AI Era Is Possible: What Proton’s CEO Says and How to Protect Yourself

Privacy in the AI Era Is Possible: What Proton’s CEO Says and How to Protect Yourself AI tools are now part of daily life for millions of people. Whether you use ChatGPT, Google Bard, or any other large language model, you are feeding it personal information—emails you paste, documents you upload, questions about your health or finances. The convenience is real. So is the privacy risk. ...

June 8, 2026 · 4 min · BriefArc Desk

Why Judges Are Banning AI Tools in Court—and What It Means for Your Privacy

Why Judges Are Banning AI Tools in Court—and What It Means for Your Privacy In recent months, a growing number of federal and state judges have issued orders specifically barring the use of artificial intelligence tools—particularly large language models like ChatGPT—during the discovery phase of litigation. These bans are not about hype or fear of technology; they stem from concrete privacy and confidentiality risks that arise when sensitive legal documents are fed into cloud-based AI systems. While the rulings target the legal profession, the underlying concerns apply to anyone who uses AI note-takers, summarizers, or document-review tools for work or personal matters. ...

June 8, 2026 · 4 min · BriefArc Desk

Judges Are Blocking AI in Court Cases Over Privacy Fears — What It Means for You

Judges Are Blocking AI in Court Cases Over Privacy Fears — What It Means for You In recent weeks, several federal and state judges have issued public orders barring the use of artificial intelligence tools during the legal discovery process. The reasoning? Privacy risks that go well beyond the courtroom. While these rulings may seem like inside-baseball for lawyers, they echo a broader set of concerns about how AI handles sensitive data — concerns that affect anyone who uses an AI notetaker, transcription service, or document summarizer. ...

June 8, 2026 · 4 min · BriefArc Desk

How to Protect Your Privacy When Using AI Tools – Insights from Proton’s CEO

How to Protect Your Privacy When Using AI Tools – Insights from Proton’s CEO Intro Proton CEO Andy Yen has a reputation for being cautiously optimistic about privacy technology. End-to-end encryption, zero-access architectures, and open‑source transparency have long been his company’s answer to surveillance and data harvesting. But when asked about the AI era, Yen admits one thing keeps him up at night. It is not a technical failure or a government crackdown. It is the way even well‑meaning users hand over their most personal conversations and documents to AI services without a second thought. ...

June 8, 2026 · 5 min · BriefArc Desk

Can You Keep Your Data Private While Using AI? Here's What Proton's CEO Says

Can You Keep Your Data Private While Using AI? Here’s What Proton’s CEO Says Introduction Proton CEO Andy Yen has built a company whose entire pitch is privacy. ProtonMail, ProtonVPN, and Proton Drive all rely on end-to-end encryption and a business model that avoids selling user data. So when Yen says something keeps him up at night about artificial intelligence, it’s worth listening. ...

June 8, 2026 · 4 min · BriefArc Desk

Judges Are Banning Public AI in Court Cases — What That Means for Your Privacy at Work

Judges Are Banning Public AI in Court Cases — What That Means for Your Privacy at Work A growing number of judges are issuing orders that prohibit lawyers and parties from using public artificial intelligence tools during discovery. The reason? Privacy risks that many professionals have not fully considered. If you use AI for document review, note-taking, or research with sensitive information, these rulings carry lessons that extend well beyond the courtroom. ...

June 7, 2026 · 4 min · BriefArc Desk

Judges Are Banning AI in Court Cases Over Privacy — What You Need to Know

Judges Are Banning AI in Court Cases Over Privacy — What You Need to Know Recent court orders have started barring lawyers from using generative AI tools during the discovery phase of litigation. The reason is straightforward: these tools pose serious privacy risks that can compromise sensitive client information and the integrity of legal proceedings. These rulings, reported by Bloomberg Law, are a wake-up call for anyone relying on AI for notetaking, document summarization, or evidence review — not just lawyers, but also privacy-conscious consumers and professionals handling confidential data. ...

June 7, 2026 · 4 min · BriefArc Desk