Insatiable demand for IT experts undermines state security
The US and UK governments are struggling to recruit the number of tech-savvy agents they require to police their citizens. And that is causing security issues.
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In a first for the US military Chelsea Manning, the soldier serving 35-years in prison for sending classified documents to Wikileaks, is to receive hormone therapy as part of her gender reassignment.
Bradley Manning, the US soldier accused of the leaking classified US documents to WikiLeaks, makes his first court appearance since being arrested in Iraq last year.
In the latest information breach in retaliation for the prosecution of Bradley Manning, Anonymous releases more data from intelligence analysis firm, Stratfor, and issues a new year’s eve warning.
“Pattern-of-life” analysis has emerged as a new buzz term in revelations about the National Security Agency. But what is it? And how does it connect shopping with spying?
The US and UK governments are struggling to recruit the number of tech-savvy agents they require to police their citizens. And that is causing security issues.
American reporter James Kirchick hijacks an interview on Russia Today to protest about Moscow’s anti-gay rights laws – and gets taken off the air.
Julian Assange says Edward Snowden is “healthy and safe” hours after the surveillance whistleblower did not turn up for a flight he was expected to catch to Cuba.
Undermining the British government’s position in the diplomatic stand-off over Julian Assange, the MP George Galloway implied our courts have done something “unprecedented” in order to comply with the Swedish authorities. Setting aside the diplomatic impasse which now finds Mr Assange holed up at the Equadorian embassy, is this a first for Britain? Are we really extraditing someone simply for questioning?
The WikiLeaks founder calls for the US to end its ‘war on whistleblowers’ but gives no hint as to how his extradition deadlock will be resolved.
Few journalists would deny that WikiLeaks has proved a force for freedom of information. Many US legislators have argued that that freedom has come at a terrible cost to US national security.
WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange loses his battle against extradition from Britain to Sweden to stand trial for alleged sex offences.
Following the arrests of six alleged members of the LulzSec internet hacker collective, Channel 4 News scours their social media profiles and finds a love of weapons, chemistry and Julian Assange.
With founder Julian Assange facing a rape trial in Sweden, funding crippled by a “financial blockade” and dwindling support from fellow hactivists, can WikiLeaks survive? Channel 4 News investigates.
A victory for the struggle for womens’ rights: three peace and democracy activists are awarded this year’s Nobel Prize for Peace.
President Obama announces the resumption of military trials at Guantanamo Bay. Sarah Smith says he’s effectively admitting that he cannot carry through plans to close the camp.