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The Cyberlaw Podcast: Interviewing Jimmy Wales Cofounder of Wikipedia
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Chatter: Information Ecology with Alicia Wanless
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The Lawfare Podcast: The Wagner Group, Bakhmut, and a New Phase in the Ukraine War
Scott R. Anderson, Shane Harris, and Isabelle Khurshudyan discussed the peculiar role played by the Wagner Group, recent revelations stemming from the Discord leaks, and what to expect from the conflict ... -
The Unintended Consequences of Economic Sanctions
Two recent books add to the literature on how sanctions are reshaping the global economy and the consequences of that reshaping. -
Two Visions of Digital Sovereignty
EU policymakers may soon finalize cybersecurity standards that could render the new Trans-Atlantic Data Privacy Framework irrelevant. -
The Cyberlaw Podcast: When AI Poses an Existential Risk to Your Law License
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The Lawfare Podcast: Erdoğan Wins Reelection in Turkey
Lawfare Legal Fellow Saraphin Dhanani sat down with Soli Özel, Senior Lecturer at Kadir Has University in Istanbul and a columnist at Habertürk daily newspaper, to discuss what was at stake in this recen... -
Errors From ChatGPT: Hallucinated Whoppers Rather Than Pedantic Subtleties
ChatGPT is generating misinformation about Herb Lin. I should know—I’m Herb Lin. -
Extremist NFTs Across Blockchains
NFTs are used to spread extremism. While they are not yet a major ground for extremism, more research should be directed toward understanding the societal impact of Web3 on security. -
How the New Justice Dept. Media Guidelines Might Work in Close Cases
Would the revised Justice Department News Media guidelines have stopped past overreach? -
FISA Court’s Section 702 Opinion and Memo, Explained
Most notably, the court warned that, if these violations continue, the number of FBI officials with access to FISA-sourced data could be “substantially limited.” -
Chatter: Popular Presidential Communication with Anne Pluta
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Jan. 6 and Beyond: Why the U.S. Should Pass Domestic Terrorism Legislation
Domestic terrorism legislation is still useful—even if Jan. 6 rioters have been prosecuted without a federal law on the books. -
The Lawfare Podcast: Roger Parloff on the Oath Keeper Sentences
Thursday was sentencing day for some senior Oath Keepers. -
The FTC, Fertility App Premom, and Sharing Consumer Health Data
The FTC shows again that some companies widely share Americans’ health data—and Congress needs to do more. -
Open Questions, Legal Hurdles for Biden’s New Border Rule
The post-Title 42 rule aims to reduce asylum-seekers’ reliance on unauthorized entry but faces practical and legal hurdles. -
TikTok Sues State of Montana
After Montana’s governor codified a law banning the social media platform, TikTok is claiming that the bill was unconstitutional. -
U.S. and Partners Release Joint Cybersecurity Advisory on Volt Typhoon
The joint advisory warns of the tactics, techniques, and procedures used by a China state-sponsored cyber actor targeting U.S. critical infrastructure organizations. -
Rational Security: The 'Alan is One Year Closer to Death' Edition
This week, Alan, Quinta, and Scott were reunited to celebrate Alan's gradual physical and mental decline, and to talk over the week in national security news. -
The Lawfare Podcast: Timothy McVeigh and the Rise of Right-Wing Extremism
Jack Goldsmith spoke to Jeffrey Toobin about his new book on the bombing and trial called, “Homegrown: Timothy McVeigh and the Rise of Right-Wing Extremism.”
More Articles
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Is It Time for an AI Expert Protection Program?
AI experts face security risks as geopolitical targets. It’s time to consider protection programs similar to witness security to safeguard critical talent. -
Lawfare Live: Trials of the Trump Administration, July 3
Join the Lawfare team at 4 pm ET for a discussion of the litigation targeting actions from President Trump. -
A Based Deal: The Chagos Agreement Is a Fourfold Win
The recent agreement on U.K. recognition of Mauritian sovereignty over the Chagos Archipelago is a true example of win-win diplomacy.