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Social Media Isn’t a Public Function, but Maybe the Internet Is
Revisiting the public function doctrine is central to the task of protecting users from internet exclusion at the hands of private parties. -
Logistical Lessons From Ukraine—and What It Means for Taiwan
Pre-positioned contingency stockpiles within Taiwan and closely located partner states will -
Artificial Intelligence, Virtual Courts, and Real Harms
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Digitizing the Battlefield: Using Social Media to Track U.S. Weapons in Ukraine
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The Week That Will Be
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The Lawfare Podcast: Chip Brantley and Andrew Beck Grace on White Lies Season 2
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Department of Defense Releases Cyber Workforce Strategy, 2023–2027
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The Week That Was: All of Lawfare in One Post
Your weekly summary of everything on the site. -
The Lawfare Podcast: Kemba Walden
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Building From the 2023 National Cybersecurity Strategy: Reshaping the Terrain of Cyberspace
If executed well, the strategy will serve as a strong pivot into a better vision for U.S. policy in cyberspace; if not, much of its promise will lack punch. -
Is the Democratic Republic of Congo Considering a Pivot to Russia?
The Congolese government and military are deepening ties to Moscow, and trying to use this as leverage with the United States and Europe. -
Justice and the Confiscation of Russian State Assets
If the United States confiscates Russian state assets and transfers them to Ukraine, it shou -
The Lawfare Podcast: Does Section 230 Protect ChatGPT?
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Rational Security: The 'Giving Two Effs' Edition
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The D.C. District Court Upholds the Government’s Geofence Warrant Used to Identify Jan. 6 Rioters
The district court’s Jan. 25 holding green-lights the government’s use of geofence warrants -
A Not-So-Imperial Presidency
Despite critiques that the president exercises unilateral authority over use-of-force decisions, Congress appears to maintain consistent influence. -
The Chatter Podcast: The American Battle Monuments Commission with Mark Hertling
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Vicious Cycle: How Press Bias Fed FISA Abuse in the Trump-Russia Panic
It’s high time for the FBI to end its reliance on anonymous press reports to prove critical facts in FISA applications. -
The Indian Telecommunication Bill Engenders Security and Privacy Risks
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The Lawfare Podcast: Philippe Sands on Britain’s Last Colony
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A Terrorism of Vengeance
Understanding incels, school shooters, and the new category of terrorism, “nihilistic violent extremism.” -
The Situation: Why Can’t Kash Patel Shut Up?
On the FBI director’s penchant for commenting on pending matters. -
The Administration’s Drug Boat Strikes Are Crimes Against Humanity
Members of Congress are wrong to call the strikes war crimes in the absence of an armed conflict, but the strikes are serious crimes under international law.
