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Microsoft Forgoes Its Secure Future
The latest edition of the Seriously Risky Business cybersecurity newsletter, now on Lawfare. -
The Promptware Kill Chain
Prompt injection attacks against AI models are not simple attacks; they are the first step of a kill chain. Understanding this gives defenders a set of countermeasures. -
The Visual Performance of Precision Lethality on Social Media
How precision strikes became visual performances—and why that matters for law, legitimacy, and civilian harm. -
Lawfare Daily: Lessons for Civilian Harm Mitigation in Urban Warfare, from Gaza and Beyond
Listen to a panel discussion at a conference on Precision Lethality and Civilian Harm Mitigation. -
To Read This, Please Upload Photo ID
A primer on digital age assurance methods and a survey of the laws—both enacted and proposed—requiring them. -
Lawfare Live: The Trials of the Trump Administration, Feb. 13
Join the Lawfare team at 4 pm ET for a discussion of the litigation surrounding the Trump administration. -
Rational Security: The “Midnight Train to Ukraine” Edition
Scott Anderson, Benjamin Wittes, and Anastasiia Lapatina discussed the latest developments in Ukraine. -
ICE’s Unconstitutional Double Standard for Protesters
DHS’s threats to create a database of anti-ICE protesters raise troubling First Amendment concerns. -
Lawfare Daily: Why AI Won’t Revolutionize Law (At Least Not Yet), with Arvind Narayanan and Justin Curl
What are the bottlenecks preventing AI from reducing legal costs? -
AI Won’t Automatically Make Legal Services Cheaper
Three bottlenecks between AI capability and access to justice. -
Minnesota FACE Off: A Deep Dive Into the St. Paul Church Protest Case
Unpacking the Don Lemon indictment, its factual allegations, the elements the government must prove to convict, and the potential defenses available to the accused. -
'When Life Gives You Lemons': A Minnesota Case Study in How the Trump Administration Warps Justice
The bizarre saga that unfolded in the weeks leading up to Don Lemon’s indictment illustrates just how far the Justice Department has fallen. -
The Situation: Grand Juries in Savage Times
They really are an important civil liberties protection. -
For Washington, All Roads Lead to Minsk
As Washington falls out with some of its closest, most enduring allies, Belarus, long isolated by the West, has gained favor. -
Lawfare Daily: Dockets Die in Darkness with Peter Beck and Seamus Hughes
What is the impact of the increasing number of news deserts? -
Fulton Co. Election Office Search Warrant Affidavits Made Public
The release followed Judge J.P. Boulee’s order to unseal the docket on Feb. 7. -
Trump’s Board of Peace: America’s Worst Coalition of the Willing
Both parties have tried coalitions of the willing. Trump’s Board of Peace repeats the mistake—only worse, with autocrats and a fee. -
Trump’s $100K H-1B Visa Fee May Be Here to Stay
Breaking down a federal judge’s decision upholding Trump’s hefty fee on visas for high-skilled workers, now under appeal. -
Scaling Laws: The Persuasion Machine: David Rand on How LLMs Can Reshape Political Beliefs
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Lawfare Daily: What To Expect on the Immigration Front in Year 2 of Trump's Second Term
What might the Trump administration's immigration policy look like in 2026?
More Articles
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Lawfare Live: The Trials of the Trump Administration, March 27
Join the Lawfare team at 4 pm ET for a discussion of the litigation surrounding the Trump administration. -
Does Product Liability Offer a Route Around Section 230?
Lawsuits against social media companies are addressing not only Section 230, but also product liability law and the First Amendment. -
Rational Security: The “Authentic Flavors, Real Fruit” Edition
Scott Anderson sat down with Molly Roberts, Tyler McBrien, and Renée DiResta to talk through the week’s big national security news stories.
