by By TIM STARKS | Mar 7, 2019 | Cybersecurity, Donald Trump, Election Security, Homeland Security
Presented by With help from Eric Geller and Martin Matishak Editor’s Note: This edition of Morning Cybersecurity is published weekdays at 10 a.m. POLITICO Pro Cybersecurity subscribers hold exclusive early access to the newsletter each morning at 6…
by Paul Rosenzweig | Feb 11, 2019 | Cybersecurity, Homeland Security, National Security
It is a commonplace in government to substitute reorganization for rethinking at a more fundamental level. Tuesday’s Washington Post reports another instance of the phenomenon. It is a commonplace in government to substitute reorganization for…
by Paul Rosenzweig | Jan 13, 2019 | Cybersecurity, National Security
Most Lawfare readers will be familiar with Kaspersky Labs, the Russian cybersecurity firm. Many American cyberspecurity experts (including Rick Ledgett, Nicholas Weaver, and me) have been skeptical about the firm, suspecting that its connections to…
by Paul Rosenzweig | Nov 26, 2018 | Cybersecurity
Reporters don’t get to break the law to create or investigate a story. “If you speed on the way to a story, you’re still speeding,” said Paul Rosenzweig, who teaches cybersecurity law at George Washington University School of Law. “You don’t get a…
by Paul Rosenzweig | Nov 1, 2018 | Cybersecurity, Election Security
WASHINGTON, D.C.—If you look at the machines voters will use in many states, you might find the state of voting security disconcerting—even frightening. But if you want a real post-Halloween scare, check out how dozens of states let absentee voters…
by Paul Rosenzweig | Sep 18, 2018 | Cybersecurity
111 See Paul Rosenzweig, The Unpersuasiveness of the Case for Cybersecurity Regulation–An Introduction, LAWFARE BLOG (May 17, 2012, 12:35 PM), https://www.lawfareblog.com/unpersuasiveness-case-cybersecurity-regulation-%E2%80%93-introduction. In his…