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How McAfee unraveled Blitzkrieg

By | Dec 15, 2012 | Comments Off on How McAfee unraveled Blitzkrieg

McAfee Labs turned to old fashioned human intelligence to blow the cover off an...

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Shamoon’s fatal flaw

By | Nov 19, 2012 | Comments Off on Shamoon’s fatal flaw

Here’s something to be thankful for -- Malware authors are only human. The designers of...

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Glaring biometrics gap could close

By | Nov 15, 2012 | Comments Off on Glaring biometrics gap could close

When investigators in Afghanistan find fingerprints on defused improvised explosive...

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Air Force explains automation delay

By | Sep 18, 2012 | Comments Off on Air Force explains automation delay

A popular metaphor in Air Force intelligence circles has analysts drowning in a sea of...

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FISA Scuffle

Opponents seize renewal as chance to reel in surveillance

By | Aug 17, 2012 | 1 comment

The coming months look rich with potential turning points in the debate over whether the U.S. has gone too far in the expanded eavesdropping allowed by amendments to the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act. The FISA collection strategy is a top contributor to the intelligence community's big data storage dilemma and inevitably sweeps up emails, texts and telephone calls to and from people on U.S. soil. For critics, the collections amount to trampling American privacy rights. For supporters, there are plenty of safeguards in place to protect privacy and keep Americans safe. About the only consensus is that if Congress doesn't act, the sun will set Dec. 31 on the FISA amendments and their expanded eavesdropping.

Rep. Mike Rogers, R-Mich., supports renewing the amendments in his role as chairman of the House Permanent Select Committee on intelligence, and he predicts at most a political "scuffle" [pls link to the excerpts and intro of his interview] over a bill introduced in June that would extend the eavesdropping through 2017.

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