The hacktivist group Anonymous is believed to have hacked Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump's voicemail and leaked messages from 2012, which appear to show how the liberal media in the US is supporting the billionaire.
China is run by technocrats who rule with an iron fist. Surveillance in China is turning into an art form, driven by technology-crazed engineers and scientists who believe that they can completely control their citizens. There are few laws preventing
Claire Bernish of TheAntiMedia.org joins us today to discuss her latest article, "So It Begins: American Police Start Pushing to Weaponize Domestic Drones." We discuss the pending legislation and the legislative precedent for this type of armed p
"Apple scored a major legal victory in its ongoing battle against the FBI on Monday when a federal magistrate judge in New York rejected the U.S. government's request as part of a drug case to force the company to help it extract data from a lock
The Maryland Senate on Tuesday delayed action on a bill that would clamp down on when public buses and trains can record the private conversations of their passengers.
Pass a billboard while driving in the next few months, and there is a good chance the company that owns it will know you were there and what you did afterward.
The US public doesn't need a Digital Security Commission, they need the FBI to stop deceiving everyone and tell the truth that it wants to spy on Americans, John McAfee, developer of the first commercial anti-virus program told RT's Ed Schultz.
AS THE FBI and Apple fight a media war over whether the federal government can force the computer company to hack an iPhone, in California a new privacy law is raising questions over how deeply government should be allowed to peer into a convicted cr
As the Apple vs. FBI battle rages in the court system and throughout the halls of Congress, Obama decides to do what he does best. Using "his pen" to make consequential decisions unilaterally.
As I sometimes do, I'm going to structure this piece just a wee bit in reverse of the obvious order so that I can get certain things above the fold. Namely, Neal Reynolds's thoughts on the matter of the FBI vs. Apple's iPhone encryption.
The question is, shaping agendas to improve the world for who? Considering how "improved" the world obviously is since 1971, they're really doing a bang up job over there. Listening to them talk is tough, with the smarmy "us versus them" me
Microsoft founder Bill Gates voiced his support for the FBI in its battle with Apple Inc, and insisted that Tim Cook was mischaracterizing the agency's order when he said it wanted the company to "build a backdoor" into the iPhone.
• http://thefreethoughtproject.com, By Matt Agorist
As the federal government continues to publicly chastise Apple for keeping their users' data secure, Apple remains resilient in their act of civil disobedience -- in spite of a court order filed on Friday against the tech giant
A judge has ordered Apple to bypass iPhone security in order for the FBI to attempt a brute-force password attack on an iPhone 5c used by one of the San Bernardino killers. Apple is refusing. The order is pretty specific technically. This implies
Data security is a worldwide problem, and there is a wide world of encryption solutions available. Most of these products are developed and sold by for-profit entities. They are available, for sale or free download, all over the world.
The government is already spying on us through spying on us through our computers, phones, cars, buses, streetlights, at airports and on the street, via mobile scanners and drones, through our credit cards and smart meters (update), television, doll,
Laura Poitras has a talent for disappearing. In her early documentaries like My Country, My Country and The Oath, her camera seems to float invisibly in rooms where subjects carry on intimate conversations as if they're not being observed.
The head of the NSA's Tailored Access Operations (TAO) group -- basically the country's chief hacker -- spoke earlier this week. He talked both about how the NSA hacks into networks, and what network defenders can do to protect themselves.
The House Judiciary Committee will hold its first hearing next week on two of the NSA spying programs revealed by whistleblower Edward Snowden that vacuum up domestic content despite being ostensibly targeted at foreigners: PRISM and Upstream.
Canada's CBC network reported Thursday that the country is slamming on the brakes when it comes to sharing some communications intelligence with key allies -- including the U.S. -- out of fear that Canadian personal information is not properly pr
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