The Government Explains Why It Took My Email
Barrett Brown, writing from a new prison in Texas, attempts to decipher his overlords’ charming decrees.
Barrett Brown, writing from a new prison in Texas, attempts to decipher his overlords’ charming decrees.
Hospitals and the people inside them have protected status under international law. Even if soldiers were at the hospital, its destruction would be difficult to justify.
The first of 3,500 personal injury and 37 wrongful death claims against DuPont went to trial in Columbus, Ohio, this week.
Civil libertarians are worried about an increasingly common form of domestic surveillance that has nothing to do with listening to your phone calls or reading your emails.
After months of citing hypothetical crimes as a reason to prevent the FBI from "going dark," Comey has pulled out the terror card.
The Pentagon’s new Law of War Manual delineates the military’s power to censor journalists’ work and even deem them “unprivileged belligerents” should they be suspected of supporting the work of the enemy.
Wyden wants more debate on what tech companies call an impossible requirement that would lead to massive over-reporting of useless information.
Falsified mortgage documents from the “robo-signing” era are still being used to foreclose on homeowners — but those in a position of authority appear determined to pretend it isn’t happening.
The Snowden archive contains a stunning 2005 document that not only confirms ECHELON's existence — it shows how the program was kept an official secret for so long.
Despite all the scary talk about encryption and “going dark,” the FBI has lots of ways to hack into suspects’ computers to see what they’re doing.
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