Latest in Cybersecurity & Tech
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The Hegseth Doctrine? Military-Academic De-coupling Competition
Pentagon cuts to military education at elite universities risk weakening U.S. technological innovation, officer development, and strategic competition with China. -
The GSA’s Draft AI Clause Is Governance by Sledgehammer
The General Services Administration’s draft AI clause gets the governance problem right—then blows right past it. -
Two Illegal Biolabs Reveal Gaps in U.S. Biosecurity
The discovery of CCP-linked biolabs on American soil exposes major biosecurity gaps. Policymakers must act to improve oversight of biological research activity. -
Scaling Laws: Is AI a Death Sentence for Civic Institutions? with Jessica Silbey and Woodrow Hartzog
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Spyware-Based Searches for Domestic Criminal Law Enforcement
NSO Group’s and Paragon’s targeting of American markets warrant evaluation of spyware’s potential implications for domestic criminal justice. -
Scaling Laws: Can AI Enable Human Agency?, with Tomicah Tillemann
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Huawei Is Betting on the Future with HarmonyOS
HarmonyOS is positioning itself as the operating system through which billions of users could one day interact with Chinese AI worldwide. -
Trump's Cyber Strategy… Great, Amazing, The Best Yet
The latest edition of the Seriously Risky Business cybersecurity newsletter, now on Lawfare. -
Lawfare Live: The Trials of the Trump Administration, March 13
Join the Lawfare team at 4 pm ET for a discussion of the litigation surrounding the Trump administration. -
Rational Security: The "Stop Cap" Edition
Scott Anderson sat down with Kate Klonick, Molly Roberts, and Troy Edwards to talk through the week’s big national security news stories. -
Military AI as ‘Abnormal’ Technology
AI may be a “normal” technology in the boardroom. In the military, where costs are externalized and secrecy is default, it’s anything but. -
The Situation: Thinking About Anthropic’s Red Lines
What does the AI company mean by “mass surveillance” and “lethal autonomous warfare”?


