Science & Tech

The Military Wants to Understand Why You Believe What You Believe

What makes an idea like the Islamic State spread? The Pentagon wants to know. By Patrick Tucker

Threats

NSA Says Intelligence on the Islamic State Could Have Been 'Stronger'

The nation’s top spies account for faulty intelligence in Iraq and warn that ‘it could get bad.’ By Patrick Tucker

Threats

China Wants To Replicate NSA’s Cyber Schools

About 60 Chinese schools are interested in incorporating the NSA’s cyber education program in their curriculums. By Aliya Sternstein

Policy

NSA Chief: Yes, We Still Have Friends

A confident Adm. Rogers says the NSA remains popular with the people it spied on. By Patrick Tucker

Policy

Obama’s Deadline To Reform NSA’s Spying Powers Is Extended Again

Nine months after the president promised to rein in the NSA’s spying powers, the business of reform is delayed for 90 days -- again. By Dustin Volz

Policy

NSA Reform Will Likely Wait Until After the Election

It looks increasingly like legislation to reform the government’s surveillance programs might not get touched at all until next year. By Dustin Volz

Ideas

A Case for Edward Snowden's Immunity

Any effort that tries to rebuild the well-behaved aspects of the NSA's surveillance system while ignoring the critical role of whistleblowers is sure to fail. By Yochai Benkler

Science & Tech

What Made Obama's Spy Chief Suddenly Support NSA Reform?

In a remarkable shift, James Clapper has come out in support of legislation that would effectively end the bulk collection of U.S. citizens' phone records. By Dustin Volz

Business

What to Expect From Obama's Resurgent Intel Advisory Panel

The president's Intelligence Advisory Board had only 4 members a year ago. Will the panel's 6 new appointees hit the ground running? By Aliya Sternstein

Policy

Why Sen. Feinstein Wants the CIA Torture Report Delayed

Hint: it has do with the agency's beloved black highlighter. By Dustin Volz

Policy

How Snowden Complicates the Prevention of Future Leaks

Whether one believes Snowden's leaks to be salutary or deeply regrettable, it's useful to understand what prompted him to act as he did. By Conor Friedersdorf

Ideas

Yet Again, CIA is Concealing Information Americans Should See

Only President Obama can break the stalemate between CIA and the Senate over declassifying the 9/11 torture report. By J. William Leonard

Policy

Here Are the 7 Pages That Gave President Obama Cover to Kill Americans

A newly released memo giving Obama legal cover from extrajudicial killings is alarmingly terse. By Conor Friedersdorf

Science & Tech

The Navy Is Tracking Some Strange Sounds Coming from the Ocean

A network of Internet-connected undersea microphones is picking up more than Cold War era sub-hunting ever did. By Matthew Braga

Threats

Meet the Man Leading the Snowden Damage Investigation

Bill Evanina just became the 'National Counterterrorism Executive' and one of his first jobs is a big one. By Charles S. Clark

Science & Tech

Edward Snowden Is Concerned About 'NSA Fatigue'

The poster child for NSA reform fears surveillance fatigue is leading to a culture of complacency across the globe. By Dustin Volz

Science & Tech

The Public Will Soon Be Able to Buy Military-Grade Satellite Images

The view from space is about to get a lot clearer for the public. And that’s a good thing for the military. By Patrick Tucker

Threats

Snowden Says the NSA Shut Down Syria's Internet

In a new interview, the fugitive leaker claims the NSA inadvertently took down Syria’s Internet during its prolonged civil war. By Dustin Volz

Ideas

The U.S. Needs More Drones

The threat from terrorism is changing in ways that make intelligence collection all the more important. By Paul Scharre

Policy

The CIA Can’t Hack Senate Computers Because They Own Them, Experts Say

It’s not hacking because the CIA provided the system, network drive, search tool and classified documents for the Senate. By Aliya Sternstein