‘The new Stuxnet’ – is GCHQ linked to Regin hacking campaign?
Reports emerge of a new highly advanced hacking tool that may be linked to the UK’s spying headquarters.
899 items found
Yemen is currently without a president and a government after Shia rebels took over the capital Sana’a causing ramifications for the region and the US’s war on terror.
David Cameron hails legislation to deliver new powers for Scotland as “built to last, securing our united future.” But is it what Scotland was hoping for? Channel 4 takes a look.
A man is arrested as dozens of firefighters tackle three fires, including one at the offices of South Oxfordshire District Council where a car is thought to have hit the building before the fire.
It began the year as a relatively quiet issue. Then along came the Ukip surge, a shock European election and two Conservative defections. Here we look back at the last 12 months of immigration.
Sony Pictures scraps its comedy film based on the fictional assassination of North Korea’s leader, Kim Jong-un, after embarrassing internal emails are leaked and further cyber hacks are threatened.
Reports emerge of a new highly advanced hacking tool that may be linked to the UK’s spying headquarters.
Will a deal on Iran’s nuclear programme lead to rapprochement between the US and the Islamic state after 35 years of enmity?
A video purporting to show the murder of US aid worker Peter Kassig by the Islamic State group is released online.
“A bunch of militamen were in control of a British army base in the UK”. A whistleblower gives his shocking account of the Libyan army training fiasco to International Editor Lindsey Hilsum.
There are rumblings of a big announcement from David Cameron on EU immigration. But he may have little room for manoeuvre.
MPs have backed a motion calling for the UK to recognise Palestine. What would it mean and are we behind the curve?
Mothers occupying houses, place-hackers scaling buildings and teens taking over shopping centres: Symeon Brown reports from the frontline of the battle to take back public space.
Alan Henning’s brother-in-law says the family’s hopes had been raised and then shattered by Islamic State militants, as David Cameron says he will “hunt down” the British aid worker’s killers.
One minister said the truth is that the attacks that will be authorised with today’s vote are one step on a ladder of 20 rungs and no one really knows what the other steps will turn out to be.
The Commons votes to join air strikes in Iraq against the Islamic State group. Is the UK now locked on course for conflict in Syria, too, and backlash on British streets?