-
The Cyberlaw Podcast: Silicon Valley Speech Suppression Is Going To The Supreme Court
-
First Amendment Absolutism and Florida’s Social Media Law
The Eleventh Circuit’s opinion striking down most of Florida’s controversial social media law mostly gets the First Amendment right but also shortchanges the important government interests at stake. -
The Lawfare Podcast: China’s NFT Plans for Digital Control
-
Rational Security 2.0: The 'Washington Meltdown' Edition
-
Thoughts on the Michael Sussmann Verdict
The Michael Sussmann case was an attempt to supplant the traditional understanding of the Trump-Russia story with an insurgent model in which the more important story than the Trump-Russia relationship w... -
The Law of Armed Conflict in 2040? A New Volume
I am pleased to announce Oxford University Press’s publication of “The Future Law of Armed Conflict,” a volume I co-edited with my former student and member of West Point’s law department, Tom Oakley. -
Today’s Headlines and Commentary
Lawfare’s daily roundup of national security news and opinion. -
TechTank: Deciphering the Metaverse
The latest episode of TechTank. -
The Lawfare Podcast: Klein and Cordero on the Latest FISA Numbers
-
The Week That Will Be
Lawfare's weekly roundup of event announcements and employment opportunities. -
Examining State Bills on Data Brokers
The laws already in California and Vermont do not put any meaningful controls on companies selling, licensing and otherwise sharing Americans’ sensitive data on the open market—and the new bills are no d... -
The Week That Was: All of Lawfare in One Post
Your weekly summary of everything on the site. -
Expanding U.S. Counterterrorism in Somalia Is Necessary but Insufficient
The recent redeployment of U.S. troops won't change the security landscape of Somalia, but it could provide an opportunity for change. -
Today’s Headlines and Commentary
Lawfare’s daily roundup of national security news and opinion. -
ChinaTalk: U.S.-China Tech Relations: A Guide for the Perplexed
Where should US-China tech relations go? What should “Competitive when it should be. Collaborative when it can be. Adversarial when it must be” actually mean in practice? -
ChinaTalk: Xinjiang and US Imports: The UFLPA's Regulatory Revolution
The Uyghur Forced Labor Prevention Act will come into force in the US on June, 21, 2022. On this episode, John Foote, a partner and the head of the customs practice at Kelley Drye & Warren, discusses the... -
The Lawfare Podcast: Phil Klay on Citizenship in an Age of Endless Invisible War
-
#LiveFromUkraine: Anastasiia Bakulina
Anastasiia Bakulina is the founder and CEO of Svidomi Media, a Ukrainian news source distributed through Twitter and Telegram. She joins Benjamin Wittes Friday at 2:00 pm Eastern time on #LiveFromUkraine. -
How to Start a Cybersecurity Clinic
University-based cybersecurity clinics are a way for universities to meet their ideals and responsibilities for public service by addressing two intersecting challenges at once: the growing need for expe... -
The Effects of Digital Transnational Repression and the Responsibility of Host States
Digital transnational repression has a chilling effect on exiled and diaspora activists and dissidents who find themselves repressed by authoritarian states, even in places where they assumed they had a ...
More Articles
-
Reconfiguring U.S. Cyber Strategy in the Wake of Salt Typhoon
Persistent penetration of domestic networks makes coordinated defenses and robust deterrence essential to preventing cyber conflict. -
Rational Security: The “Pickled Fish in Cozy Sweaters” Edition
Scott Anderson sat down with Eric Columbus, Anastasiia Lapatina, and Loren Voss to talk through the week’s big news in national security. -
Shared Residual Liability for Frontier AI Firms
To promote AI accountability and peer-monitoring, AI firms should be held collectively liable for catastrophic damages.