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How Tech Regulation Can Leverage Product Experimentation Results
Mandated visibility into product experimentation would allow regulators to audit platform design choices to prevent societal harm. -
The Puzzling Non-Use of Data Access Laws: The NetzDG Case
One law mandating access to data on illegal content on social media has gone unused, highlighting the need for supporting infrastructure. -
The National Security Law Podcast: We Have Many Tapestries!
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How FBI Querying Under FISA Section 702 Works
Understanding the FBI’s new search rules regarding Americans’ communications is critical to the debate on Section 702 renewal. -
The Lawfare Podcast: Eric Goldstein of DHS on All Matters Cyber
Executive Assistant Director for Cybersecurity of the U.S. Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency, Eric Goldstein, joined to discuss all things cybersecurity. -
Yemen's Year-Long Truce Creates Opportunities for Durable Peace
The United States and United Nations remain critical actors in the diplomacy to resolve the civil war. -
The Week That Was: All of Lawfare in One Post
Your weekly summary of everything on the site. -
DC Circuit Court Upholds but Narrows FOSTA
The court found that the Allow States and Victims to Fight Online Sex Trafficking Act is not overbroad or unconstitutionally vague. -
The REPO Act: Confiscating Russian State Assets and Ukrainian Reparations
The bill proposes a flawed and possibly unconstitutional reparations program and needs to be reworked to give Ukraine some chance at a viable post-war future. -
The Government’s Objections to FISA 702 Reform Are Paper Thin
The government is focused on FISA Section 702’s value, but under scrutiny it couldn't show any ways key reforms would undermine its impact. -
ChinaTalk: Moneyball for Foreign Aid
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The Lawfare Podcast: But Her Emails!
Does former President Trump's Mar-a-Lago conduct bear any resemblance to the conduct of Hillary Clinton regarding her emails? -
How the New Interoperability Mandate Could Violate the EU Charter
If interoperability can’t be accomplished without reducing security, then the DMA mandate arguably should remain a dead letter until it can. -
Rational Security: The “BANG! POW! SPARKLE!” Edition
This week, Alan, Quinta, and Scott sat down to talk over the week's post-Independence Day national security news. -
The Lawfare Podcast: Assistant Treasury Secretary Paul Rosen on the CFIUS Process
What is the Committee on Foreign Investment in the United States and why is it so important for national security? -
Chatter: Hockey, Global Politics, and Freedom with Ethan Scheiner
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Justice Department Reports Reflect Shift in Thinking About Police Reform
The first police findings reports from Biden’s Justice Department reflect a substantive advance in the department’s police reform work. -
Biden Administration Declassifies Two Counterterrorism Memorandums
The Biden administration partly declassified two memorandums that tighten the necessary conditions for drone strikes and lay out new counterterrorism guiding principles. -
State Department Releases After Action Review on Afghanistan
The review is intended to study the department’s actions related to the United States’s 20-year military mission in Afghanistan. -
District Court Judge Grants Preliminary Injunction in Missouri v. Biden
Judge Terry A. Doughty restricted parts of the federal government from communicating with social media companies.
More Articles
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The Situation: In Praise of Ruth Marcus
The Washington Post’s latest self-inflicted wound -
Pirates, Privateers, and Cartels: Why Profit-Driven Policing Backfires
Reviving the letters of marque would undermine U.S. legal norms, create diplomatic instability, and risk unintended escalation. -
The Legality of Migrant Detention on Military Bases
The president does not have an unfettered ability to use the military to detain migrants on military bases.