Trevor Paglen and Jacob Appelbaum create beautiful, acrylic-encased computers that are also Tor nodes, anonymizing data that passes through them, and install the in art galleries all over the world, so that patrons can communicate and browse anonymou
A MARYLAND appellate court on Wednesday explained its reasoning for its landmark decision earlier this month requiring police to establish probable cause and get a warrant before using a Stingray, or cell-site simulator.
• By KATIE BENNER, JOHN MARKOFF and NICOLE PERLROTH
Now that the United States government has cracked open an iPhone that belonged to a gunman in the San Bernardino, Calif., mass shooting without Apple's help, the tech company is under pressure to find and fix the flaw.
In the small town of Fredericton, Canada, a woman crosses a quiet intersection in front of a church cathedral. Unbeknownst to her, a nearby webcam catches her in the street, along with the red light behind her--evidence of her crime.
Citing a new possible way to access a locked iPhone used by a shooter in the San Bernardino terrorist attack, the Justice Department on Monday convinced a federal court to cancel a Tuesday hearing on whether Apple should be forced to help the FBI bre
The whistleblower who exposed the totality of the America's mass domestic surveillance program suggested that users should look to free and open source software to preserve their privacy.
In the US, HotSpot Shield is best known as an easy way to protect your personal information while using public Wi-Fi -- at, say, Starbucks -- while also letting you trick services like Netflix into thinking you live in Canada or the UK to access mo
The US government uses an "insider threat" task force that has effectively placed thousands of its employees under "total surveillance" on the chance that they may leak sensitive information, the latest document released by Chelsea Manning sh
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On June 9, 2013, a then-unknown intelligence contractor named Edward Snowden revealed himself to be the source behind a series of explosive scoops based on top secret National Security
Nearly three years after NSA whistleblower Edward Snowden gave journalists his trove of documents on the intelligence community's broad and powerful surveillance regime, the public is still missing some crucial, basic facts about how the operations
As part of the government's so-called ongoing war on terror, the nation's de facto secret police force is now recruiting students and teachers to spy on each other and report anyone who appears to have the potential to be "anti-government" or
Samuel Gibbs for the Guardian reports, Edward Snowden, the whistleblower whose NSA revelations sparked a debate on mass surveillance, has waded into the arguments over the FBI's attempt to force Apple to help it unlock the iPhone 5C of one of the S
Thursday, March 24 @ 7:30pm - The Loft Cinema - Tucson, AZ - See the Oscar-winning documentary Citizenfour, followed by an onstage discussion with Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist and best-selling author Glenn Greenwald! -
At a Congressional hearing this morning that veered into contentious arguments and cringe-worthy moments, the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) spilled the beans on their social media monitoring project.
Under a Freedom of Information Act request, a Pentagon inspector general made public a report last week, admitting to the use of drones to spy on U.S. citizens.
The FBI has quietly revised its privacy rules for searching data involving Americans' international communications that was collected by the National Security Agency, US officials have confirmed to the Guardian.
The more we hear of the US government case for its demand that Apple hack its iPhone, the more the government story looks like a mix of lies and obfuscations. Should we care about this even if we don't use iPhones? You bet! Former State Department of
The war on cash is more than just a currency war to clamp everyone down on the electric grid. It is also a war on your privacy, and the nail in the coffin for the free market of low level transactions.
The court fight between Apple and the FBI prompted a slew of letters and legal briefs last week from outside parties, including many tech companies and privacy groups.
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