Here is the Spy Equipment That Powers the FBI's Secret Dragnet
The FBI is going to remarkable lengths to hide information about its surveillance programme that intercepts calls and texts with equipment called Stingrays.
The FBI is going to remarkable lengths to hide information about its surveillance programme that intercepts calls and texts with equipment called Stingrays.
A man by the name of Hunter Moore, 28, is charged for unauthorised access to a computers and identity theft.
The United States Marshals Service is auctioning off 50,000 Bitcoin seized from the personal computer of the man supposedly behind Silk Road.
It only takes opening a malware-riddled attachment to jumpstart an international, multi-million pound theft. This should not be happening.
If your better half has sent some saucy pictures to your phone, you'd better keep them to yourself. That's because not only is it a royally dick move to post private snaps to the web or distribute them among friends but, as of today, it's to become illegal to do so in England and Wales.
The act of swatting – falsely sending armed police to arrest someone – is becoming a big problem that needs a solution.
Organisation of all things futuristic, DARPA, shows off its new tool for tracking crimes on the hidden parts of the internet.
Last month the threat of a terrorist attack targeting a police officer was raised to a "severe" level.
That the NYPD has a crack Social Media Squad stalking citizens' every move is old news, but a recent Freedom of Information request sheds new light on exactly how the cops use their Facebooking powers.
It's just one more example of how high-quality, real-time satellite imagery can change our relationship to the world around us.
It's suspected that evidence obtained by the FBI was obtained with a brute-force attack, something that's illegal without a warran.
At almost any time of day in cities like London, New York, LA and Tokyo, you can meet someone on the street, in their flat, or, in my case, a well-lit, busy Starbucks, and slip them some cash in exchange for digital currency.
Around 700 people in the capital have been punished by plod for being vile.
A jury found the 30-year-old Californian guilty on all counts, including money laundering, drug trafficking and computer hacking.
Kevin Bollaert is the first person to be convicted for running a revenge porn website in the US.
The trial around the Silk Road marketplace has brought to the fore details of biker-gang Hell's Angels interactions with the Deep Web.