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Scott Shapiro has a new book on how and why hacking works and what to do about it, called “Fancy Bear Goes Phishing: The Dark History of the Information Age, in Five Extraordinary Hacks.”
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The first class of Lawfare's cybersecurity and hacking course is now available to the public.
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The 2022 guidelines establish express protections for receiving and publishing government secrets.
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Recent revisions barring foreign lawyers in national security cases call into question Hong Kong’s commitment to its obligations under international human rights law.
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Lawfare’s weekly roundup of event announcements and employment opportunities.
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In November 1919, President Woodrow Wilson made a self-defeating decision.
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A Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court opinion documents improper use of the FBI’s 702 database.
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The government’s requests are aggressive and, extrapolating from judges’ previous sentencing practices, unlikely to be accepted in full.
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Can the liberal international order survive the strategy to save it?
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Thoughts on Gonzalez, Taamneh, and the future of Section 230.
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The Supreme Court ruled that the social media companies are not liable for ISIS attacks that victims’ families claimed resulted from algorithms promoting terrorist content on their platforms.