All Passcode
- Is student privacy erased as classrooms turn digital?
Privacy researcher Elana Zeide says schools need more transparency about how student data is used by educational publishers and software companies.
- Orin Kerr's radical idea for reforming anti-hacking laws
Law professor Orin Kerr argues that social norms are the best ways of determining what's 'authorized' and 'unauthorized' computer access, a critical component of the federal anti-hacking law that critics complain is too ambiguous.
- Court ruling against NSA practice could reverberate far beyond phone spying
The federal court decision Thursday that found it illegal for the National Security Agency to collect massive amounts of phone data may have broader implications when it comes to privacy in the Digital Age.
- What it's like to have your identity stolen
Victims rarely know anything about their predators. Yet the thieves know absolutely everything about them.
- The burgeoning business of identity protection
Services that monitor credit reports and help protect consumers from fraud are proliferating. But are the fees they charge worth it, and can they really guard against identity theft?
- The identity underworld: How criminals sell your data on the Dark Web
Criminals can buy and sell your Social Security Number and the most intimate details of your personal life on sophisticated Internet forums.
- Influencers: Congress should end NSA bulk data collection
In a Passcode survey, a group of more than 90 experts from across government, the private sector and privacy advocacy community call for surveillance reforms.
- 'Father of the Internet' Vint Cerf advocates for stronger encryption technology
'Your laptop should be encrypted, your disk drive should be encrypted, your mobile should be encrypted,' said Cerf, Google’s chief Internet evangelist, at a talk in Washington this week.
- Opinion: The Pentagon's risky offensive cyberstrategy
While the Pentagon's new cybersecurity strategy puts more weight on striking back against criminal or nation-state hackers, a more effective way to deter attacks may be through diplomacy, law enforcement, and sanctions.
- Both sides of data encryption debate face off in Congress
Congress hears from technologists who favor stronger encryption on consumer devices and those who say such technology could hamper law enforcement efforts.
- Warnings of hackers on planes all too familiar to airline security researchers
Fresh government reports and alerts about the hacking threat to airplane avionics systems underscores the challenges facing industry and government as more critical infrastructure becomes Internet connected.
- Opinion: Egypt’s cybercrime bill poses threat to freedom of expression
The draft law gives Egyptian authorities more power to control the Internet under the pretext of national security, leading the way to censorship of online news, cultural and political sites, and controversial views on the Web.
- Opinion: If predictive algorithms craft the best e-mails, we're all in big trouble
The new Crystal app creates profiles 'for every person with an online presence' so its users can craft the ideal e-mail for every recipient. That's not only troubling for privacy, but also threatens to strip individuality out of our digital dialogue.
- Lawmakers revive support for Aaron's Law to reform anti-hacking statute
The bill named for late Internet activist Aaron Swartz, who committed suicide while facing charges under the Computer Fraud and Abuse Act, aims to restrict prosecutorial actions for crimes related to hacking.
- At cybersecurity gathering, the White House steps up charm offensive
US government officials ventured to the West Coast to win over the security community and business leaders as Internet security proposals make their way through Congress.
- How cybersecurity competitions build tomorrow's workforce in the US and abroad
Northrop Grumman continues commitment to cyber STEM education through innovative cyber challenges, including the most recent in the UK.
- Pentagon cybersecurity strategy comes with olive branch to Silicon Valley
In the first visit to Silicon Valley by a Defense secretary in nearly 20 years, Pentagon chief Ashton Carter rolled out the national cybersecurity defense strategy on Thursday during a trip meant to repair ties with the technology industry.
- Once a field of self-taught hackers, cybersecurity education shifts to universities
Over the past year, colleges and universities across the country have received millions in funding from the government and foundations to launch cybersecurity initiatives. The result is a stark change for an industry made up of programmers who have often learned by trial and error.
- The drone debate: Does the coming swarm of flying gadgets require new privacy laws?
While the Federal Aviation Administration is being sued because its proposed drone policy doesn't address privacy, others argue that unmanned aerial vehicles don't require new privacy standards, saying that existing laws are enough.
- Scaling the firewall: Ways around government censorship online
As countries such as Turkey, China, Ethiopia, and Bahrain block online content, people are discovering ways to get around Internet censors. Their methods depend on the kind of censorship they face and what they are doing online.