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Lost In Translation: Language Gaps in Social Media Labels
Platforms often fail to make warning labels accessible to users who do not speak English. -
Today’s Headlines and Commentary
Lawfare’s daily roundup of national security news and opinion. -
The Lawfare Podcast: Is Block Party the Future of Content Moderation?
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Chatter: The Olympics, Politics, and Security with Ethan Scheiner
This week, David Priess speak with professor and writer Ethan Scheiner about the history of the Olympic games, the many political controversies in and around the games since 1896, and the security challe... -
Livestream: President Biden Announces Killing of Islamic State Leader in Counterterrorism Operation
On Feb. 3, President Biden announced that U.S. forces successfully undertook a counterterrorism operation that killed Abu Ibrahim al-Hashimi al-Qurayshi, the leader of the Islamic State. -
The National Security Law Podcast: What Month Is This Anyway?
The latest episode of The National Security Law Podcast. -
The Open Data Market and Risks to National Security
Rather than focusing on single vectors of data collection and transmission, the U.S. government must respond comprehensively to the many vectors of data collection, aggregation, buying, selling and shari... -
Today’s Headlines and Commentary
Lawfare’s daily roundup of national security news and opinion. -
Water Wars: Japan Focused on Defense Expansion, while U.S. Makes a Soft-Power Push
Japan boosts defense spending and emphasizes defense cooperation with the U.S. and Australia as the possibility of a Taiwan emergency grows, while the U.S. makes an economic push in Southeast Asia, and c... -
The Flawed Claims About Bias in Facial Recognition
Recent improvements in face recognition show that disparities previously chalked up to bias are largely the result of a couple of technical issues. -
The Lawfare Podcast: YouTube Influencers and the Chinese Government
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Rational Security 2.0: The ‘Wet February’ Edition
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What’s ‘Politicizing’ the 2022 Winter Olympics?
Chinese officials claim the U.S. diplomatic boycott is politicizing the games, but the Olympics have always been political. -
Shadow Sanctions for Immigration Violations
Although the INA strictly imposes deportation for all immigration offenses, immigration law does not, in practice, have only one penalty—but these sanctions are imposed arbitrarily and in the shadows of ... -
Today’s Headlines and Commentary
Lawfare’s daily roundup of national security news and opinion. -
Specters of Fear and Executive Power
A review of David M. Driesen, “The Specter of Dictatorship: Judicial Enabling of Presidential Power” (Stanford University Press, 2021). -
The Lawfare Podcast: Afghanistan Six Months After the Taliban Takeover
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Lawfare Live: Current Round of China Legislation.
Join Editor In Chief Bejamin Wittes this Friday at 12:30 for a live taping of The Lawfare Podcast, with guests Susan A. Thornton and Jordan Schneider to talk the latest legislation regarding China. -
The Cyberlaw Podcast: Regulatory Swagger Comes to Washington
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U.S. State Department Picks Apart PRC’s South China Sea Customary Law Claim
A recent State Department legal analysis highlights the unique roles that the United States plays in interpreting and enforcing maritime law in the South China Sea. This legal diplomacy also illustrates ...
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The Week That Was
Your weekly summary of everything on the site. -
Trump Offers First Legal Justification for Venezuela Boat Strike
The 48-hour War Powers report claims the president acted on the basis of his Article II authority as an act of “self-defense.” -
Did the President’s Strike on Tren de Aragua Violate the Law?
By applying the tools of war to civilians, the Trump administration is entering unprecedented—and deeply problematic—legal territory.