World | Passcode
- Silicon Valley begins putting cyberbullies in the crosshairs
With the rate of digital bullying increasing, tech firms escalate efforts to build automated tools that can detect and flag online harassment.
- A more connected military means new battlefield glitches, too
With its $52 million initiative to vastly expand connectivity and technology on the front lines, the US Army knows it may also give enemies new digital targets to hack or manipulate. Is it up for the challenge?
- Podcast: Life as a teenage hacker
Paul Vann, the 14-year-old chief executive officer of VannTechCyber, and his father, Raytheon's Paul Vann, join this episode of The Cybersecurity Podcast.
- The hackers trying to build a hack-proof operating system
A team of Canadian security researchers is set to unveil a computer operating system called Subgraph designed to protect its users from the most common types of digital attacks.
- What keeps cybersecurity experts up at night?
For Passcode’s last Influencers Poll, we asked an open-ended question: What’s the most urgent cybersecurity or privacy challenge right now, and what’s one way to fix it?
- What Benjamin Franklin can teach us about cybersecurity
Advances in communication like Franklin’s postal service and today’s Internet can help topple regimes — and also erode privacy. Tools like WhoIsGuard offer the anonymity of a Post Office Box.
- Want to fix cybersecurity? Think about worst-case scenarios first
Scenario thinking sketches out future cybersecurity problems and helps policymakers begin addressing tomorrow's digital dilemmas.
- Industrial control systems: The holy grail of cyberwar
Regulators and utility industry leaders need to wake up to the risks that could let malicious hackers cause widespread physical damage to the grid and other critical infrastructure.
- How to reform the outdated federal anti-hacking law
The more than 30-year-old Computer Fraud and Abuse Act carries overly harsh penalties for trivial digital transgressions – and it needs to be completely overhauled (or abolished altogether).
- Estonia's lessons for fighting Russian disinformation
The Baltic nation has long had an adversarial relationship with its Russian neighbor. As a result, its press and public have become adept at recognizing and debunking Kremlin propaganda.
- 15 under 15: Rising stars in cybersecurity
The Christian Science Monitor's Passcode traveled across the country to meet these hacker kids who are hunting software bugs, protecting school networks, and helping to safeguard electrical grids.
- How technology tramples on freedom
Rapid advances in biometric technology mean the public is surveilled – and their movements recorded – more than ever before. If this technology spreads without limits, it could soon impinge on basic rights.
- The ExplainerBoston broke a record last year for fewest homicides. It’s on track to do it again.
- Five years after fire, a shining Notre Dame is ready to reopen its doors
- Why Florida and almost half of US states are enshrining a right to hunt and fish
- Waves of joy flood Damascus. But an undercurrent of distrust lingers.
- Malibu’s wildfire threatens my community. It’s also bringing us together.