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Before yesterdayWIRED

Enter the Hunter Satellites Preparing for Space War

By Mark Harris
True Anomaly, a startup backed by US senator JD Vance's VC firm, plans to launch prototype pursuit satellites on a SpaceX flight later this year.

ADS-B Exchange, the Flight Tracker That Powered @ElonJet, Sold to Jetnet

By Justin Ling
ADS-B Exchange, beloved for resisting censorship, was sold to a company owned by private equity—and now even its biggest fans are bailing.

Most Criminal Cryptocurrency Funnels Through Just 5 Exchanges

By Andy Greenberg
The crypto money-laundering market is tighter than at any time in the past decade, and the few big players are moving a “shocking” amount of currency.

The Small but Mighty Danger of Echo Chamber Extremism

By Thor Benson
Research shows that relatively few people exist in perfectly sealed-off media bubbles—but they’re still having an outsize impact on US politics.

Spy Cams Reveal the Grim Reality of Slaughterhouse Gas Chambers

By Andy Greenberg
Animal rights activists have captured the first hidden-camera video from inside a carbon dioxide “stunning chamber” in a US meatpacking plant.

Turla, a Russian Espionage Group, Piggybacked on Other Hackers' USB Infections

By Andy Greenberg
The infamous, FSB-connected Turla group took over other hackers' servers, exploiting their USB drive malware for targeted espionage.

LastPass Data Breach: It’s Time to Ditch This Password Manager

By Lily Hay Newman
The password manager’s most recent data breach is so concerning, users need to take immediate steps to protect themselves.

A New Lawsuit Accuses Meta of Inflaming Civil War in Ethiopia

By Vittoria Elliott, Dell Cameron
The suit claims the company lacks adequate moderation to prevent widespread hate speech that has led to violence and death.

Hackers Planted Files to Frame Indian Priest Who Died in Custody

By Andy Greenberg
And new evidence suggests those hackers may have collaborated with the police who investigated him.

Why the US Is Primed for Radicalization

By Thor Benson
A confluence of factors is leading people in the nation to gravitate toward extremist views.

I Lost $17,000 in Crypto. Here’s How to Avoid My Mistake

By Alexander Webb
I’m not the first person to suffer this fate, but hopefully I can be the last.

Here’s How Bad a Twitter Mega-Breach Would Be

By Lily Hay Newman
Elon Musk laid off half the staff, and mass resignations seem likely. If nobody’s there to protect the fort, what’s the worst that could happen?

Twitter’s SMS Two-Factor Authentication Is Melting Down

By Lily Hay Newman
Problems with the important security feature may be some of the first signs that Elon Musk’s social network is fraying at the edges.

The Hunt for the FTX Thieves Has Begun

By Andy Greenberg
Mysterious crooks took hundreds of millions of dollars from FTX just as it collapsed. Crypto-tracing blockchain analysis may provide an answer.

Elon Musk's Twitter Blue Verification Is a Gift to Scammers

By Matt Burgess
Anyone can get a blue tick on Twitter without proving who they are. And it’s already causing a ton of problems.

Inside the ‘Election Integrity App’ Built to Purge US Voter Rolls

By Dhruv Mehrotra
True the Vote’s IV3 app is meant to catch election cheaters. But it has a fundamental flaw.

The Secret Ballot Is US Democracy’s Last Line of Defense

By Lily Hay Newman
Voter intimidation has cropped up in places across the nation, but the voting booth remains the one place where nobody can get to you.

Soccer Fans, You're Being Watched

By Vas Panagiotopoulos
Stadiums around the world, including at the 2022 World Cup in Qatar, are subjecting spectators to invasive biometric surveillance tech.

When Your Neighbor Turns You In

By Thor Benson
Authoritarian societies depend on people ratting each other out for activities that were recently legal—and it's already happening in the US.

If Musk Starts Firing Twitter's Security Team, Run

By Lily Hay Newman
What's next for the social network is anyone's guess—but here's what to watch as you wade through the privacy and security morass.

The Quiet Insurrection the January 6 Committee Missed

By Matt Laslo
A former congressman who helped the House select committee investigate the Capitol attack says the US is losing sight of the big picture.

The $1 Billion Alex Jones Effect

By Chris Stokel-Walker
The Infowars host now knows the cost of “free speech”—but does the landmark judgment signal a crackdown on disinformation?

Meta Says It Has Busted More Than 400 Login-Stealing Apps This Year

By Lily Hay Newman
The company plans to alert 1 million Facebook users that their account credentials may have been compromised by malicious software.

A New Linux Tool Aims to Guard Against Supply Chain Attacks

By Lily Hay Newman
Security firm Chainguard has created a simple, open source way for organizations to defend the cloud against some of the most insidious attacks.

Telegram Has a Serious Doxing Problem

By Peter Guest
The encrypted messaging app is a haven for politically motivated vitriol, but users are increasingly bringing threats to targets’ doorsteps.

Inside the Shadow Evacuation of Kabul

By Michael Venutolo-Mantovani
In the last two weeks of the war, an ad hoc team armed with group chats, QR codes, and satellite maps launched a mad dash to save imperiled Afghan allies.

The Twitter Whistleblower’s Testimony Has Senators Out for Blood

By Matt Laslo
Peiter “Mudge” Zatko’s allegations about the social media platform renewed a sense of urgency for lawmakers to rein in Big Tech.

How Whistleblowers Navigate a Security Minefield

By Matt Burgess
Exposing wrongdoing is risky on the best of days. Whistleblower Aid cofounder John Tye explains the extensive steps needed to keep people safe.

This Clever Anti-Censorship Tool Lets Russians Read Blocked News

By Matt Burgess
Samizdat Online syndicates banned news sites by hosting them on uncensored domains—allowing people to access independent reporting.

Meta Just Happens to Expand Messenger’s End-to-End Encryption

By Lily Hay Newman
The company says an expansion of privacy features in Messenger is unrelated to a high-profile Nebraska abortion case.

Big Takeaways From the FBI's Mar-a-Lago Raid

By Garrett M. Graff
The fact that a search of Donald Trump's Florida home was even necessary says a lot.

Don’t Call the New Federal Gun Law a Gun Law

By Matt Laslo
Democratic senators lacked actionable gun data for their negotiations—so they passed mental health reform instead.

Interstate Travel Post-Roe Isn’t as Secure as You May Think

By Thor Benson
Despite the DOJ vowing to protect people's ability to travel out of state for abortion care, legal experts warn not to take that freedom for granted.

The 2022 US Midterm Elections' Top Security Issue: Death Threats

By Lily Hay Newman
While cybersecurity and foreign meddling remain priorities, domestic threats against election workers have risen to the top of the list.

Congress Might Pass an Actually Good Privacy Bill

By Gilad Edelman
A bill with bipartisan support might finally give the US a strong federal data protection law.

Period-Tracking and Fertility Apps Can Put Women Seeking Abortions at Risk

By Vittoria Elliott
Apps collect sensitive data that could be subpoenaed by law enforcement or sold by data brokers.

The Race to Hide Your Voice

By Matt Burgess
Voice recognition—and data collection—have boomed in recent years. Researchers are figuring out how to protect your privacy.
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