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Two legal regimes—the law of the sea and the law on the use of force—can apply to damage caused by states to submarine cables during peacetime.
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Improving the resilience and defense of undersea cables must be a national security priority.
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A discussion of how climate change impacts the subsea cable system—a critical element of internet infrastructure—and analysis of the legal and policy factors that inform the protection of this system.
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Submarine cables' security and resiliency are vital to the global internet as we know it—but this infrastructure faces many risks that policymakers must help tackle.
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U.S. government access to at least some private market data—and the limiting of foreign access to this same information—is essential for national security.
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Can governments purchase user records as an end-run around the warrant requirement imposed by Carpenter v. United States?
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What are the legal and policy questions raised by gig surveillance work?
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The perils that flow from facial recognition can be mitigated through sensible limits without banning the technology and the risks of facial recognition are less bad than the options police have without ...
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What are the origins and evolution of the institutional, policy and legal frameworks that have come to define both the defensive and offensive aspects of the U.K. and U.S. models?