Author: Dnvolz
WSJ online coverage of breaking news and current headlines from the US and around the world. Top stories, photos, videos, detailed analysis and in-depth reporting.
View all posts by Dnvolz
Dnvolz has recently written 8 articles on similar topics including :
- "Some of the FBI’s electronic surveillance activities violated the constitutional privacy rights of Americans swept up in a controversial foreign intelligence program, a surveillance court has ruled". (October 8, 2019)
- "The Justice Department filed a civil lawsuit against Edward Snowden, arguing he violated government nondisclosure agreements by publishing a book about his 2013 disclosures of classified surveillance programs". (September 17, 2019)
- "International governments are passing laws that allow authorities to pressure tech companies such as Apple and Facebook for access to digital secrets". (February 26, 2019)
- "The suspected Russian hack involving SolarWinds software that compromised parts of the U.S. government was executed on a scale that has surprised even veteran security experts. It has exposed a potentially critical vulnerability in Americas technology infrastructure, investigators say". (December 18, 2020)
- "Facebook, under scrutiny to root out election misinformation on its platform, almost inadvertently published incorrect information about a voter registration deadline this year". (February 7, 2020)
- "Multiple federal agencies, including the Treasury and Commerce departments, have had some of their computer systems breached as part of a widespread campaign believed to be the work of the Russian government". (December 14, 2020)
- "Facebook said it had removed a network of more than 100 pages and accounts linked to Roger Stone, the longtime confidant of President Trump, because it violated company rules against coordinated inauthentic behavior". (July 9, 2020)
- "When the New York Post published articles based on email exchanges with Hunter Biden, social-media companies saw the situation as one they spent years preparing for. Their actions drew a mixture of support and criticism". (October 16, 2020)