Senators Want Social Media Firms to Hunt for Terrorists
But the last thing the FBI needs, experts say, is a deluge of poorly vetted data. And the risk to free speech rights is considerable.
But the last thing the FBI needs, experts say, is a deluge of poorly vetted data. And the risk to free speech rights is considerable.
ProtonMail and its allies have forced the Swiss government to put its new invasive surveillance law up for a public vote in a national referendum in June.
Saudi Arabia’s well-funded public relations apparatus moved quickly after Saturday’s explosive execution of Shiite political dissident Nimr al-Nimr to shape how the news is covered in the United States.
“Snapshots” from Israeli drone feeds offer a rare glimpse at a closely guarded secret.
Trump never suggested that China was part of the TPP, only that the country would “come in, as they always do, through the back door” of the agreement.
Faced with sweeping yet vague laws in Russia, publishers and booksellers play it safe, avoiding subjects that might provoke readers or the state.
In high schools around the country, teams of students are engaging in a more intense, thoughtful debate about government spying than Congress has ever had.
In November, we’ll be adding a new analytics system to help us better understand how our stories spread.
One year ago, millions marched in Paris in defense of free speech. Why, then, is the systematic attack on free speech rights in France now ignored?
Mahdi Hashi had never been to the U.S. before he was imprisoned at a federal jail in lower Manhattan and subjected to prolonged solitary confinement — before he had been deemed guilty by the justice system.
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