Last month, the NSA’s telephone metadata program was first ruled illegal by a federal court, then marked for termination by Congress, a turn of events that Edward Snowden has declared as “a historic victory for the rights of every citizen.”
A federal court has ruled that the NSA’s metadata surveillance program, which collected information on at least 80 percent of all the phone calls made or received by Americans, was not authorized by the PATRIOT Act and therefore illegal.
Did the US military intentionally leak F-35 plans to China to trick them into investing hundreds of billions into an already obsolete stealth fighter, J-31?
Your right to encrypt your files and communications maybe under threat from FBI director James Comey, who urges Congress to mandate backdoors in electronics
Edwards Snowden leaked more information to Der Spiegel about the F-35 revealing that the DOD knew that Chinese hackers stole plans for the F-35.
NSA had access to North Korea’s computer networks, supporting the U.S. claim that it was able to track the Sony Pictures hack back to NK.
The world’s most expensive weapons program has just received more bad news. Edward Snowden leaked information to German newspaper Der Spiegel that confirms 2009 reports of terabytes of classified data regarding the design of the F-35 Joint Strike Fighter (JSF) being stolen.
Espionage around the world increased rapidly after revelations about the NSA’s spying activities by Edward Snowden.
We had a real eye opener last week. Many people had trouble reaching Unseen.is (get your free account today), our new private and secure communications system.
The report recommends raising the bar on how much U.S. data the NSA can acquire and how long it can be kept.
Snowden revelations keep making headlines, but do they make us any wiser about what is really going on in the world of intelligence gathering and sharing? And are we focusing too much on them?
Before Chinese authorities let Edward Snowden, the former NSA contractor, out of Hong Kong, they made sure they had obtained all the intelligence he had.
New revelations seem to go beyond Snowden’s original purpose of protecting privacy.
NSA leaker Edward Snowden has found a worldwide audience in Hong Kong, but if he hopes to find safety there, he may be mistaken.
Edward Snowden’s disclosures on U.S. surveillance operations are increasingly being seen as most helpful to the regime in China, a Communist Party which operates its own program of domestic and foreign surveillance.
The reasons Edward Snowden gives for his actions don’t add up. Factoring in an ideological passion helps make sense of his behavior.
Last month, the NSA’s telephone metadata program was first ruled illegal by a federal court, then marked for termination by Congress, a turn of events that Edward Snowden has declared as “a historic victory for the rights of every citizen.”
A federal court has ruled that the NSA’s metadata surveillance program, which collected information on at least 80 percent of all the phone calls made or received by Americans, was not authorized by the PATRIOT Act and therefore illegal.
Did the US military intentionally leak F-35 plans to China to trick them into investing hundreds of billions into an already obsolete stealth fighter, J-31?
Your right to encrypt your files and communications maybe under threat from FBI director James Comey, who urges Congress to mandate backdoors in electronics
Edwards Snowden leaked more information to Der Spiegel about the F-35 revealing that the DOD knew that Chinese hackers stole plans for the F-35.
NSA had access to North Korea’s computer networks, supporting the U.S. claim that it was able to track the Sony Pictures hack back to NK.
The world’s most expensive weapons program has just received more bad news. Edward Snowden leaked information to German newspaper Der Spiegel that confirms 2009 reports of terabytes of classified data regarding the design of the F-35 Joint Strike Fighter (JSF) being stolen.
Espionage around the world increased rapidly after revelations about the NSA’s spying activities by Edward Snowden.
We had a real eye opener last week. Many people had trouble reaching Unseen.is (get your free account today), our new private and secure communications system.
The report recommends raising the bar on how much U.S. data the NSA can acquire and how long it can be kept.
Snowden revelations keep making headlines, but do they make us any wiser about what is really going on in the world of intelligence gathering and sharing? And are we focusing too much on them?
Before Chinese authorities let Edward Snowden, the former NSA contractor, out of Hong Kong, they made sure they had obtained all the intelligence he had.
New revelations seem to go beyond Snowden’s original purpose of protecting privacy.
NSA leaker Edward Snowden has found a worldwide audience in Hong Kong, but if he hopes to find safety there, he may be mistaken.
Edward Snowden’s disclosures on U.S. surveillance operations are increasingly being seen as most helpful to the regime in China, a Communist Party which operates its own program of domestic and foreign surveillance.
The reasons Edward Snowden gives for his actions don’t add up. Factoring in an ideological passion helps make sense of his behavior.