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The tech giant is facing criticism over its appointment of a former NSA director.
But the controversial phone metadata program played little role in the terror-fundraising case at issue, the long-awaited ruling says.
As the Snowden leaks continue to dribble out, it has become increasingly obvious that most nations planning for "cyber-war" have been mer...
Edward Snowden recently released his memoirs. In some parts of the Internet, this has rekindled an ancient debate: namely, was it all worth it? Did Snowden’s leaks make us better off, or did …
• Top-secret Prism program claims direct access to servers of firms including Google, Apple and Facebook• Companies deny any knowledge of program in operation since 2007
L'agence de surveillance US victime de son zèle
The Shadow Brokers leak showed the NSA was tracking at least 45 nation-state hacking operations. Experts explain how the agency stepped up its monitoring.
The agency tells a federal judge that it is investigating and 'sincerely regrets its failure.'
According to a new report in Der Spiegel, the NSA regularly intercepts shipments of laptops and other electronic devices in ...
The NSA's TAO hacking unit is considered to be the intelligence agency's top secret weapon. It maintains its own covert network, infiltrates computers around the world and even intercepts shipping deliveries to plant back doors in electronics ordered by those it is targeting.
The National Security Agency under former President Barack Obama routinely violated American privacy protections while scouring through overseas intercepts and failed to disclose the extent of the problems until the final days before Donald Trump was elected president last fall, according to once top-secret documents that chronicle some of the most serious constitutional abuses to date by the U.S. intelligence community.
Wcry uses weapons-grade exploit published by the NSA-leaking Shadow Brokers.
There's something going on inside the intelligence communities in at least two countries, and we have no idea what it is.
The National Security Agency vacuumed up more than 151 million records about Americans’ phone calls last year via a new system that Congress created to end the agency’s once-secret program that collected domestic calling records in bulk, a report disclosed Tuesday.
Although the number is large on its face, it nonetheless represents a massive reduction from the amount of information the agency gathered previously. Under the old system, it collected potentially “billions of records per day,” according to a 2014 study.