The British government is pressuring Apple to provide backdoor access to users’ data.
America remains ill-prepared for Chinese hackers targeting critical infrastructure.
A federal appellate court has put an end to the FCC’s attempt to impose common-carrier rules on broadband Internet providers.
Almost half a century on, Saul Bellow’s To Jerusalem and Back still reads as an uncannily accurate take on Israel, the United States, and the enemies of the West.
Lina Khan’s reign of ruin at the Federal Trade Commission is coming to an end.
Whether intentionally or not, Emily Witt’s memoir portrays radical progressivism as a destructive psychological condition.
The SEC and the State of California aspire to set policy for the whole nation—at the expense of doing their jobs.
Efforts to regulate the crypto industry out of existence—or to create a government-controlled digital currency—are deeply misguided.
A new novel retells the story of Tiananmen Square.
The Federal Trade Commission chair seeks expansive powers to regulate businesses through an ahistorical reading of antitrust law.
Salman Rushdie’s new memoir chronicles the price he paid for speaking freely.
A professor who indulges students’ radicalism sees his dinner party spoiled by protests.
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