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added: Wed, 28th September 2005 | 353 views | 0x in favourites
feed url: http://www.wired.com/news/feeds/rss2/0,2610,4,00.xml
Wired News: Politics
A judge in San Francisco federal court hears arguments from the Justice Department and Electronic Frontier Foundation regarding lawsuits against telecoms that cooperated with the Bush administration's once-secret domestic spy program.
Sonic blasters and private security teams have been billed as some of
the best bets to ward off pirates. But an incident off the coast of
Somalia is calling the effectiveness of the weapons — and the guards —
into question.
Scientists are still debating whether electromagnetic fields — like
the ones generated by your cellphone — are bad for your health. The
United Nations is pushing ahead with the idea that the fields are a
"Potential Threat as a Terrorism Agent."
The jury forewoman in the Lori Drew trial says jurors wanted to convict Lori Drew on three felony counts for unauthorized access to MySpace's computer system, but were stymied by lack of evidence from the prosecutor and had to convict her of misdemeanors.
The jury radically reinterprets a 20-year-old anti-hacking law to find Lori Drew guilty of three misdemeanors. But juries do crazy things all the time. The only opinions that matter are those of the trial judge and the U.S. 9th Circuit Court of Appeals, neither of whom have weighed in yet.
The Bush administration and the Electronic Frontier Foundation are poised to square off in front of a San Francisco federal judge Tuesday to litigate the constitutionality of legislation immunizing the nation's telecoms from lawsuits accusing them of helping the government spy on Americans without warrants.
The Mumbai terrorists used an array of commercial technologies -- from Blackberries to GPS navigators to anonymous e-mail accounts -- to pull off their heinous attacks.
What if a sniper could fire a bullet that changed course in mid-flight to hit its target? The Pentagon hands out nearly $22 million to try to find out.
A Pennsylvania National Guard unit will get a new toy before it
deploys to Iraq in January — an odd-looking robotic recon aircraft,
sometimes referred to as "the flying beer keg."
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