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How the Pentagon Learned to Use Targeted Ads to Find Its Targetsβ€”and Vladimir Putin

By Byron Tau
Meet the guy who taught US intelligence agencies how to make the most of the ad tech ecosystem, "the largest information-gathering enterprise ever conceived by man."

2054, Part VI: Standoff at Arlington

By Elliot Ackerman, Admiral James Stavridis
β€œThis eruption of violence had been brewing for years, through successive economic collapses, pandemics, and the utter dysfunction that had become American life.” An exclusive excerpt from 2054: A Novel.

2054, Part V: From Tokyo With Love

By Elliot Ackerman, Admiral James Stavridis
β€œHad this all been contrived? Had his life become a game in which everyone knew the rules but him?” An exclusive excerpt from 2054: A Novel.

2054, Part IV: A Nation Divided

By Elliot Ackerman, Admiral James Stavridis
β€œThe people are in the streets. We can’t ignore them any longer. Really, we have little choice. Either we heal together, or we tear ourselves apart.” An exclusive excerpt from 2054: A Novel.

2054, Part III: The Singularity

By Elliot Ackerman, Admiral James Stavridis
β€œYou’d have an incomprehensible level of computational, predictive, analytic, and psychic skill. You’d have the mind of God.” An exclusive excerpt from 2054: A Novel.

2054, Part II: Next Big Thing

By Elliot Ackerman, Admiral James Stavridis
β€œIf molecules really were the new microchips, the promise of remote gene editing was that the body could be manipulated to upgrade itself.” An exclusive excerpt from 2054: A Novel.

2054, Part I: Death of a President

By Elliot Ackerman, Admiral James Stavridis
β€œThey had, quite swiftly, begun an algorithmic scrub of any narrative of the president suffering a health emergency, burying those stories.” An exclusive excerpt from 2054: A Novel.

How a 27-Year-Old Codebreaker Busted the Myth of Bitcoin’s Anonymity

By Andy Greenberg
Once, drug dealers and money launderers saw cryptocurrency as perfectly untraceable. Then a grad student named Sarah Meiklejohn proved them all wrongβ€”and set the stage for a decade-long crackdown.

The Mirai Confessions: Three Young Hackers Who Built a Web-Killing Monster Finally Tell Their Story

By Andy Greenberg
Netflix, Spotify, Twitter, PayPal, Slack. All down for millions of people. How a group of teen friends plunged into an underworld of cybercrime and broke the internetβ€”then went to work for the FBI.

What a Bloody San Francisco Street Brawl Tells Us About the Age of Citizen Surveillance

By Lauren Smiley
When a homeless man attacked a former city official, footage of the onslaught became a rallying cry. Then came another video, and anotherβ€”and the story turned inside out.

Deadglyph: New Advanced Backdoor with Distinctive Malware Tactics

By THN
Cybersecurity researchers have discovered a previously undocumented advanced backdoor dubbedΒ DeadglyphΒ employed by a threat actor known as Stealth Falcon as part of a cyber espionage campaign. "Deadglyph's architecture is unusual as it consists of cooperating components – one a native x64 binary, the other a .NET assembly," ESETΒ saidΒ in aΒ new reportΒ shared with The Hacker News. "This combination
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