Russia Vetoes UN Resolution Calling Srebrenica a Genocide - ABC News - Wednesday July 8th, 2015 at 5:42 PM

Russia Vetoes UN Resolution Calling Srebrenica a Genocide - ABC News

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BBC News

Russia Vetoes UN Resolution Calling Srebrenica a Genocide
ABC News
Russia vetoed a U.N. resolution Wednesday that would have condemned the 1995 massacre of Muslim men at Srebrenica during the Bosnian war as a "crime of genocide," saying that singling out the Bosnian Serbs for a war crime would create greater ...
Russia vetoes Bosnia genocide motionBBC News
Russia threatens veto on UN vote calling Srebrenica 'a crime of genocide'The Guardian
Russia vetoes UN resolution condemning Srebrenica massacre as a genocideThe Globe and Mail
Reuters -RadioFreeEurope/RadioLiberty
all 524 news articles »

Putin: Russia and China can overcome any difficulty together - U.S. News & World Report

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U.S. News & World Report

Putin: Russia and China can overcome any difficulty together
U.S. News & World Report
Russian President Vladimir Putin, right, and Chinese President Xi Jinping, left, shake hands prior their talks during the summit in Ufa, Russia, Wednesday, July 8, 2015. Ufa hosts SOC (Shanghai Cooperation Organization) and BRICS (Brazil, Russia, India ...
Russia woos China before BRICS summitReuters 
Back-to-back Russia-hosted summits put Putin in coveted starring roleChristian Science Monitor

PM Narendra Modi reaches Russia for BRICS 2015 summitThe Indian Express
Financial Times
all 1,190 news articles »

Russian Belts Tighten, Affecting Tastes for the Finer Things - New York Times

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New York Times

Russian Belts Tighten, Affecting Tastes for the Finer Things
New York Times
The area, Rublovka, has long housed Russia's elite: Soviet leaders like Leonid I. Brezhnev, celebrity writers, actors and filmmakers. On days when the police do not seal the leafy two-lane road to Moscow for hours so Mr. Putin can speed to the Kremlin ...

Russia may ban Soros charity in NGO crackdown - CNBC

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CNBC

Russia may ban Soros charity in NGO crackdown
CNBC
Hedge fund billionaire George Soros's charitable foundation may be kicked out of Russia, as Moscow considers banning foreign non-governmental organizations (NGO) that promote democracy. TASS, Russia's state-owned media service, reported on ... 
Russia draws up first list of 'undesirable' NGOs to be bannedNewsweek
Russian Lawmakers Target US GroupsRadioFreeEurope/RadioLiberty
Soros' Charity May Fall Victim To Russia's NGO CrackdownValueWalk

all 77 news articles »

Recession in Russia is hitting Chinese border towns - Business Insider

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Business Insider

Recession in Russia is hitting Chinese border towns
Business Insider
Heihe (China) (AFP) - The warmth of the friendship between Chinese President Xi Jinping andRussia's Vladimir Putin -- who meet Wednesday for the eighth time in two years -- does little to counter the bitter economic winds blowing through their shared ...
Why Russia's turn to China is a mirageReuters Blogs (blog) 
China Ousts Russia as Riskiest BRICS Market for Options TradersBloomberg
Ties between China and Russia warm even as trade coolsSouth China Morning Post (subscription)

all 22 news articles »

BRICS/SCO summits in Russian city of Ufa - RT

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RT

BRICS/SCO summits in Russian city of Ufa
RT
About 10,000 visitors are expected at the two events in Ufa – the BRICS and the Shanghai Cooperation Organization (SCO) summits – taking place on July 8-10. RT will keep you updated on the latest developments.
Greece Can Easily Get Funding From BRICS Bank: RussiaInternational Business Times
PM Narendra Modi Arrives in Russia for 2 Key Summits, to Meet Xi Jinping and ...NDTV
PM Narendra Modi arrives in Russia to attend BRICS, SCO summitsEconomic Times
International Business Times UK
New York Times (blog) -BDlive
all 900 
news articles »
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Russia Today Has an Illuminati Correspondent. Really. - Daily Beast

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Daily Beast

Russia Today Has an Illuminati Correspondent. Really.
Daily Beast
So it makes perfect sense that RT, Russia's state-run news service aimed primarily at non-Russian audiences, employs a reporter who specializes in uncovering the hidden role the Illuminati plays in world affairs. His name is Tony Gosling. Gosling ...

Greece debt crisis could give Russia opening to expand influence in region - Washington Times

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Washington Times

Greece debt crisis could give Russia opening to expand influence in region
Washington Times
The Obama administration is “missing the bigger picture” by not taking a more active role in the Greek debt crisis, which, if not resolved, could both expand Russia's influence in the region and decrease confidence in both the European Union and NATO ...
Greece is quickly becoming a pawn between NATO and RussiaBusiness Insider
Putin is weak: The Russian strongman is terrified of losing control. He should be.Vox 
'The west is too paranoid about Russia's information war'The Guardian

Brookings Institution (blog)-NEWS.com.au
all 180 news articles »

Greece is quickly becoming a pawn between NATO and Russia - Business Insider

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Business Insider

Greece is quickly becoming a pawn between NATO and Russia
Business Insider
putin tsipras Reuters/Alexander Zemlianichenko/PoolRussian President Vladimir Putin (R) shakes hands with Greek Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras during a signing ceremony at the Kremlin in Moscow, April 8, 2015. Tsipras did not ask for financial aid at ...
'The west is too paranoid about Russia's information war'The Guardian 
Why Russia's turn to China is a mirageReuters Blogs (blog)

Russia weighs in on the Greece debt crisisNewsweek 
Washington Times
 -Independent Online

all 200 news articles »

Greece Can Easily Get Funding From BRICS Bank: Russia - International Business Times

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International Business Times

Greece Can Easily Get Funding From BRICS Bank: Russia
International Business Times
Russia said Greece could get financing from the New Development Bank operated by Brazil,Russia, India, China and South Africa (BRICS) if it buys a few shares of the institution to become a member. The bank, which is set to begin operations next April, ... 
BRICS/SCO summits in Russian city of UfaRT
PM Arrives in Russia Today for 2 Key Summits, Will Meet Nawaz Sharif and Xi ...NDTV
Sinosphere | Xi Jinping of China Makes Cartoon Appearance Before Meetings in ...New York Times (blog)
Forbes-International Business Times UK-Bloomberg
all 784 news articles »

Testing Encryption Insecurity: A Modest Proposal

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Co-blogger Susan Landau has yet another thoughtful post on the insecurity  of back door encryption requirements -- what she calls mandating insecurity.  She calls it magical thinking, which is perhaps a bit harsh.  But her point is well taken -- one ground for opposing mandated back doors is, as I've said, that they seem to be technologically infeasible to maintain only for government access. 
So here is a thought experiment -- a useful immaculate back door would, in theory, be one that is openable by the government and only by the government.  In other words one which, even if the methodology for how it was created and implemented was publicly known, could not be broken.  We actually have a real world model for that construct -- public key encryption itself.  The solution is robust because the "how" of it (the mathematics) can be widely published and yet the particular applications of it remain impenetrable -- cracking private messages to me encrypted with my public key remains impossible.
So I propose a simple rule (perhaps even one that Congress could enact into law) -- encryption providers may be required to adopt a government sponsored "back door" technology if, and only if, the methodology for that technology has been published publicly for more than 12 months and no efforts to subvert or defeat it have been successful.  NIST gets to judge success.  That way if the NSA/FBI have a real solution that can withstand public scrutiny (and, I assume, sustained attack) they can  use it.  Absent that ... the risks outweigh the rewards.

Senate Hearings on "Going Dark" 

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Both the Senate Judiciary Committee and the Senate Intelligence Committee will hold hearings today on strong encrpytion, privacy, and the threat of "Going Dark." 
The Senate Judiciary Committee hearing will begin this morning at 10:00 am. FBI Director James Comey and Deputy Attorney General Sally Quillian Yates will appear on the first panel. Panel II will include Cyrus Vance, Jr., Lawfare's Herb Lin, and Peter Swire. 
You can watch the hearing live here
Below are the prepared statements by both members and witnesses.
FBI Director James Comey will be the sole witness in this afternoon's Senate Intelligence Committee hearing on the same subject, which will begin at 2:30 pm. You can watch the hearing live on the Committee's website
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Senator Wyden on FBI Director Comey and "Going Dark"

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Awesome, and apropos of an ongoing congressional hearing: Senator Ron Wyden's office has, with the use of Genius, responded to FBI Director James Comey's earlier Lawfare piece on "Going Dark" and encryption.  Certainly worth a look. (For the uninitiated, Genius permits crowdsourced annotation of things like song lyrics---but also works just as well for blog posts about cybersecurity and terrorism.)  

Today's Headlines and Commentary 

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The U.S. strategy in Iraq and Syria continues to underperform, at least when it comes to training moderate Syrian rebels to take on the Islamic State. Yesterday, in a hearing of the Senate Armed Services Committee, Secretary of Defense Ash Carter confirmed that the United States has trained no more than 60 fighters, well short of its goal of training 5,400 fighters within a year. Secretary Carter suggested there are 7,000 volunteers currently waiting to be vetted for training, yet conceded that the military does not know whether it will provide direct support to those fighters once they are in the field.
Yet the Islamic State has suffered significant setbacksover the last few weeks, as ISIS fighters have lost a third of Raqqa province in Syria and more than 10 villages under the weight of a Kurdish-led offensive. The Washington Post writes that the collapse of ISIS fighters has “exposed vulnerabilities in the ranks of the militants---and also the limits of the U.S.-led strategy." Even as ISIS retreats, the U.S. does not have a reliable force to press deeper into their territory. Moreover, with no Sunni alternative to take the lead, tensions between Kurdish fighters and Sunni Arabs may jeopardize gains.
In Iraq, the New York Times reports that Iraqi security forces are preparing a counteroffensive to retake Ramadi. The assault will be led by Iraq’s counterterrorism service, and according to American and Iraqi officials, the Iran-backed Shiite militias will not take part. Instead, the militias will “set blocking positions south and west of the city” in order to prevent ISIS fighters from escaping.
Finally, the Associated Press brings us a look at the secret to ISIS’s success: “fanatical and disciplined” elite shock troops who fight to the death, “wearing explosive belts to blow themselves up among their opponents if they face defeat.”  
Foreign Policy provides a handy map of the current battlefield.
Jaw-jaw is better than war-war, and so they keep talking in Vienna as world powers attempt to finalize a long-sought nuclear deal with Iran. Negotiators have agreed to extend talks until Friday. With that decision, Congress will now get an additional 30 days to review the deal under legislation passed in May, as the Administration will fail to present a draft of the final agreement to legislators before the deadline of July 9th.
Even so, the Wall Street Journal indicates that the Obama administration may be considering indefinitely extending the talks under the November 2013 interim agreement. Such a move would allow negotiators to avoid ending talks while withholding sanctions relief and keeping the pressure on Iran to finalize a permanent accord. This “methodical approach,” as outlined by Politico, could placate critics who have suggested Secretary of State John Kerry is desperate for a deal by demonstrating he is willing to accept a little more scrutiny in exchange for more leverage against Iran.
In Afghanistan, it’s jaw-jaw and war-war. The New York Times reports that a delegation from the Afghan government met with Taliban officials in Islamabad for the first time yesterday. The Timescalls the meeting the “most promising contact between the two warring sides in years,” and follows months of concerted efforts by Afghan President Ashraf Ghani to get Pakistan centrally involved in the peace process.
No matter how promising, it quickly became apparent that Taliban officials are divided on the efforts, with the group’s political office in Qatar issuing a statement that the delegates were “not authorized” to attend such a meeting. Earlier in the day in Afghanistan, a Taliban suicide bomber rammed a NATO convoy in Kabul while three militants separately tried to raid an Afghan intelligence office, killing one police officer.
The war against the Islamic State is also stepping up inside Afghanistan. Today come reports from the Long War Journal that a U.S. drone strike along the Afghanistan/Pakistan border killed Gull Zaman, ISIS’s deputy emir of “Khorasan province.” Reuters and the AFP report that two drone strikes killed between 25 and 49 other ISIS insurgents. That high casualty number is reflective of ISIS’s increasing presence in the country, with U.S. and Afghan officials saying the group is now active in three provinces. The group’s growing activity has prompted a flurry of calls for President Barack Obama to extend the U.S. drawdown timeline in the country. Retired Army General David Petraeus and Brookings Senior Fellow Michael O’Hanlon add their names to that list in today’s Washington Post.
Two car bombs rocked the Yemeni capital of Sanaa yesterday, killing at least 10 people, according to the Wall Street Journal. A group affiliated with the Islamic State claimed responsibility for one attack, which targeted a Mosque frequented by Houthis. The second bomb exploded in the southern city of Al Bayda. The Islamic State’s turn to bombing mosques in Yemen marks a departure from terrorist attacks by AQAP, which has traditionally eschewed attacks on religious locations.
A female suicide bomber blew herself up in a crowd of Nigerian government workers yesterday, killing at least 20 people. The workers were lined up to have their fingerprints taken for a new government payroll system. The Wall Street Journal notes that if the attack is confirmed to be the work of Boko Haram, it will be the group’s eighth consecutive day of attacks.
A new battlefield and a new war for Chechen Muslims: the New York Times reports that Islamic Chechen fighters have joined the battle in eastern Ukraine, attempting to push Russian-backed separatists from cities like Maripol. “We like to fight the Russians,” said one Chechen. For their part, the Times reports, the Ukrainians are happy for any help they can get. According to Ukrainian commanders, the Chechens have frequently slipped into “no man’s land to patrol and skirmish.”
Chinese state media, quoting defense experts, has called for the People’s Republic to develop a long-range strategic bomber so that the country can strike adversaries far away from its coastline, including the “second island chain,” which consists of a number of Pacific islands including Guam.  
Today, FBI Director James Comey climbed the Hillto discuss his concerns with encryption, the balance of privacy and national security, and the threat of “going dark.” His remarks come one day after a group of elite security technologists released a report entitled “Keys Under Doormats: Mandating Insecurity”, which claims that American and British governments cannot gain special access through backdoors to encrypted communications without compromising most of the world’s data and critical infrastructure. Susan Landau, a co-author of the paper, previewed its findings for Lawfare as part of our ongoing coverage of the encryption debate. In DefenseOne, Mieke Eoyang also argues that Comey is wrong: “Stronger encryption makes us all safer.”
Just now catching up on the Crypto War 2.0? Sara Sorcher at the Christian Science Monitor has got you covered with today’s long read on “the battle between Washington and Silicon Valley over encryption.”  
Elsewhere, a report from the University of Cambridge Center for Risk Studies and Lloyd’s of Londonsays that a cyber attack on the U.S. power grid could cost the economy $1 trillion dollars.
The United States Army is set to cut 40,000 soldiers from its ranks over the next two years, one year earlier than previously forecast, reports the AFP. A senior defense official disclosed that 17,000 civilians will also be laid off.
Parting Shot: Just when you thought things couldn’t go any lower in Libya, there’s this video of a Free Libya Air Force Mig-23 flying at roughly 10 feet above the ground. It’s an impressive stunt, but it leaves one wondering: with growing insurgencies and insolvable instability, how do they have the time?
ICYMI: Yesterday, on Lawfare
As part of Lawfare’s coverage of the ongoing encryption debate, Paul Rosenzweig brought us a modest proposal for testing encryption insecurity.
In response to FBI Director Comey’s earlier piece on Lawfare, Susan Landau broke down the problems with backdoor keys into encryption: in her view, it’s “mandating insecurity.”
Jennifer Williams and Yishai Schwartz shared the latest round-up of Middle East news.
Daniel Byman reviewed Days of Rage: America’s Radical Underground, the FBI, and the Forgotten Age of Revolutionary Violence.
Ben added a correction and a reiteration to his earlier piece on the OPM hack suggesting that the intelligence community shares some responsibility.
Email the Roundup Team noteworthy law and security-related articles to include, and follow us onTwitter and Facebook for additional commentary on these issues. Sign up to receive Lawfare in your inbox. Visit our Events Calendar to learn about upcoming national security events, and check out relevant job openings on our Job Board.
Read the whole story
 
· · · · · ·

KGB spy shares details of his escape to Britain in 1985

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A Soviet double spy, who secretly defected to Britain 30 years ago this month, has revealed for the first time the details of his exfiltration by British intelligence in 1985. Oleg Gordievsky was one of the highest Soviet intelligence defectors to the West in the closing stages of the Cold War.

Analysis: New Dutch spy bill proposes changes in approval, oversight 

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On July 2, 2015, the Dutch government released for public consultation a long-awaited bill that overhauls the Dutch Intelligence and Security Act of 2002. Known also as Wiv2002, the Act is the legal framework for the operations of the General Intelligence and Security Service (AIVD) and the Military Intelligence and Security Service (MIVD). The bill is a complete rewrite of the present law, and includes expansions of power, as well as changes to the approval regime and oversight.

French-US spy cooperation continues despite WikiLeaks revelations 

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A fortnight ago, I gave an interview to Spanish newspaper La Razón, in which I argued that last month’s WikiLeaks revelations about American espionage against France would not cause any drastic disruption in the intelligence cooperation between the two countries. This was confirmed on Monday morning, as the American and French defense secretaries met in the US.

The Post-Cold War Arms Race 

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By Dr. Stephen Schwalbe
Faculty Member, Public Administration at American Public University

Russia said that it would respond to any U.S. military build-up in Eastern Europe by fortifying its western border. Is another Cold War brewing?
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UK Pledges To Meet NATO Spending Target

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Chancellor George Osborne has pledged Britain will meet NATO's target of spending 2 percent of national income on defense for the remainder of the decade.
       

Saudi Royal Visits US Warship Amid Regional Tensions

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A US aircraft carrier in the Gulf hosted one of Saudi Arabia's most powerful figures, official media said on Wednesday, as regional concerns mount over alleged interference by Iran.
       

‘The Unraveling,’ by Emma Sky 

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In this memoir, a British Arabist who had opposed the invasion of Iraq recounts her time advising American forces after the fall of Saddam Hussein.

Taliban Leaders Are Said to Meet With Afghan Officials

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The Taliban has rejected face-to-face talks for years, and officials hope Tuesday’s meeting is a step toward negotiations to end the Afghan war.

2015-07-08Senators: Obama Counter-IS Strategy Failing | A secret to IS success

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Senators: Obama Counter-IS Strategy Failing | A secret to IS success: Shock troops who fight to the death - Wednesday July 8th, 2015 at 1:48 PMSenators: Obama Counter-IS Strategy Failing Wednesday July 8 th , 2015  at  1:49 PM Washington Free Beacon 1 Share Senate Armed Services Committee Chairman Sen. John McCain, joined by the committee's ranking member Sen. Jack Reed, speaks during the Senate A...
Senators: Obama Counter-IS Strategy Failing Wednesday July 8th, 2015 at 1:49 PM Washington Free Beacon 1 Share Senate Armed Services Committee Chairman Sen. John McCain, joined by the committee's...
US, Russia face-off in Middle East | Is Putin Playing Puppetmaster in Greece? | Greece is quickly becoming a pawn between NATO and Russia - Wednesday July 8th, 2015 at 1:36 PMUS, Russia face-off in Middle East Wednesday July 8 th , 2015  at  1:38 PM Full Feed 1 Share US Secretary of State John Kerry (L) meets with Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov at a hotel in Vienna, June 30, 2015.  (photo by REUTERS/Carlos Barria) Author...
US, Russia face-off in Middle East Wednesday July 8th, 2015 at 1:38 PM Full Feed 1 Share US Secretary of State John Kerry (L) meets with Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov at a hotel in Vienna, ...
Hacking Team Adobe Flash Zero-Day Exploited By Money-Hungry Criminals - ForbesHacking Team Adobe Flash Zero-Day Exploited By Money-Hungry Criminals Wednesday July 8 th , 2015  at  1:33 PM 1 Share In recent years, crypto luminary Bruce Schneier has noted that today’s surveillance tools are tomorrow’s cybercriminal playthings. Hacking ...
Hacking Team Adobe Flash Zero-Day Exploited By Money-Hungry Criminals Wednesday July 8th, 2015 at 1:33 PM 1 Share In recent years, crypto luminary Bruce Schneier has noted that today’s surveillance to...
FBI’s Amazing Trick to Avoid AccountabilityFBI’s Amazing Trick to Avoid Accountability Wednesday July 8 th , 2015  at  1:24 PM WhoWhatWhy 1 Share Matt Connolly is a former Deputy District Attorney of Norfolk County, Massachusetts How credible are the reports of interviews filed by FBI agents working...
FBI’s Amazing Trick to Avoid Accountability Wednesday July 8th, 2015 at 1:24 PM WhoWhatWhy 1 Share Matt Connolly is a former Deputy District Attorney of Norfolk County, Massachusetts How credible ...
German missile battery receives orders from… unknown ‘hackers’ – report — RT News Wednesday July 8th, 2015 at 1:11 PM RT - News 1 Share Published time: July 08, 2015 00:47 Edited time: July 08, 20...
"The missiles were hastily brought to Israel during the 1991 Gulf War, ostensibly to protect against missile attacks from Saddam Hussein’s Iraq — but the system proved ineffective, intercepting only one missile." - Report: German missiles on Syria border given 'foreign' commandsReport: German missiles on Syria border given 'foreign' commands Wednesday July 8 th , 2015  at  1:08 PM The Times Of Israel 1 Share A Patriot missile defense battery operated by Germany on the Syrian-Turkish border received “unexplained commands” from a “f...
Report: German missiles on Syria border given 'foreign' commands Wednesday July 8th, 2015 at 1:08 PM The Times Of Israel 1 Share A Patriot missile defense battery operated by Germany on the Syrian-...
US, Russia face-off in Middle East Wednesday July 8th, 2015 at 1:38 PM Full Feed 1 Share US Secretary of State John Kerry (L) meets with Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov at a hotel in Vienna, ...
Hacking Team Adobe Flash Zero-Day Exploited By Money-Hungry Criminals Wednesday July 8th, 2015 at 1:33 PM 1 Share In recent years, crypto luminary Bruce Schneier has noted that today’s surveillance to...
FBI’s Amazing Trick to Avoid Accountability Wednesday July 8th, 2015 at 1:24 PM WhoWhatWhy 1 Share Matt Connolly is a former Deputy District Attorney of Norfolk County, Massachusetts How credible ...
Security Experts Oppose Government Access to Encrypted Communication | Coders warn against giving FBI access to encrypted data - Wednesday July 8th, 2015 at 1:20 PM
Coders warn against giving FBI access to encrypted data Wednesday July 8 th , 2015  at  1:20 PM 1 Share The world’s best cryptologists are warning the U.S. government that its desire to have privileged access to encrypted data is potentially damaging to wor...
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Coders warn against giving FBI access to encrypted data Wednesday July 8th, 2015 at 1:20 PM 1 Share The world’s best cryptologists are warning the U.S. government that its desire to have privileged ac...
German missile battery receives orders from… unknown ‘hackers’ – report — RT News
German missile battery receives orders from… unknown ‘hackers’ – report — RT News Wednesday July 8 th , 2015  at  1:11 PM RT - News 1 Share Published time: July 08, 2015 00:47 Edited time: July 08, 2015 01:50 Soldiers of the German armed forces Bundeswehr s...
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German missile battery receives orders from… unknown ‘hackers’ – report — RT News Wednesday July 8th, 2015 at 1:11 PM RT - News 1 Share Published time: July 08, 2015 00:47 Edited time: July 08, 20...
Greece Essay By Barry Eichengreen Wednesday July 8th, 2015 at 1:00 PM SPIEGEL ONLINE - Schlagzeilen 1 Share In Puerto Rico, the United States now has its own version of Greece. The territ...
US, Russia face-off in Middle East | Is Putin Playing Puppetmaster in Gr...
US, Russia face-off in Middle East Wednesday July 8th, 2015 at 1:38 PM Full Feed 1 Share US Secretary of State John Kerry (L) meets with Rus
Hacking Team Adobe Flash Zero-Day Exploited By Money-Hungry Criminals - ...
Hacking Team Adobe Flash Zero-Day Exploited By Money-Hungry Criminals Wednesday July 8th, 2015 at 1:33 PM 1 Share In recent years, crypto lu
FBI’s Amazing Trick to Avoid Accountability
FBI’s Amazing Trick to Avoid Accountability Wednesday July 8th, 2015 at 1:24 PM WhoWhatWhy 1 Share Matt Connolly is a former Deputy District
German missile battery receives orders from… unknown ‘hackers’ – report ...
German missile battery receives orders from… unknown ‘hackers’ – report — RT News Wednesday July 8th, 2015 at 1:11 PM RT - News 1 Share Publ
In Puerto Rico, the United States now has its own version of Greece. - G...
Greece Essay By Barry Eichengreen Wednesday July 8th, 2015 at 1:00 PM SPIEGEL ONLINE - Schlagzeilen 1 Share In Puerto Rico, the United State

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