Your WiFi Can Be Used To Spy on You
The technology tracks your treacherous wireless signals as they bounce off you
The technology tracks your treacherous wireless signals as they bounce off you
But at least they got to pretend they were an intelligence agency
Complicated software takes the inputs and "sees" patterns
Multiple surveillance technologies bring airport security to a public place near you
We're almost certainly not yet living in the Panopticon. But any step in that direction-even if it's well-spun marketing-speak-is worth watching.
The Russian news services helped break the TrapWire story, bypassing an attack on WikiLeaks
Yeah, some mosque-goers' rights may have been violated, but proving the point could reveal government secrets
Are Internet rumors getting out of hand, like they do?
The snoopy scheme's parent company has the contract for rail-ticketing systems in several Australian cities
The hacker group that provided TrapWire documents to WikeLeaks declares war on the creepy surveillance system
Snoopy law-enforcement officials find that having data isn't the same as knowing what to do with it
Experts say surveillance tool monitoring transactions in the Middle East looks like more cyber-warfare
Bound by the rules of a classified briefing, Sen. Rand Paul resorted to slang to tell us we're screwed
His attorney general ruled earlier this year the spying was legal
Lawyers of an Islamic charity who claimed that they were wiretapped cannot recover damages according to the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit.
When it comes to wiretaps, the federal government's official policy is: "Trust us!"
History shows the benefits of positive reinforcement for Ankleted-Americans.
How can the U.S. stop fighting when the threat is so dire, but we've almost won?
The Supreme Court considers the 4th Amendment implications of new surveillance technologies.
Celebrate your independence with a subscription to Reason magazine, your most trusted source of honest, insightful news and analysis.