In the News
President Donald Trump on Tuesday fired FBI Director James Comey, who was overseeing an investigation into Russian meddling in the 2016 election and possible ties to the Trump campaign and top aides.
"The FBI is one of our Nation's most cherished and respected institutions and today will mark a new beginning for our crown jewel of law enforcement," the president said in the statement.
Perhaps the biggest takeaway from the Senate hearing on Russia arrived before it even began: Had Donald Trump taken
President Trump fired James B. Comey as the director of the FBI.
Members of Congress sent a letter to the Department of Veterans Affairs asking for more information into the department's experiments on dogs.
"We are concerned that the VA's description of these experiments as ‘observational' is inaccurate and misleads Congress and taxpayers to believe that the studies are harmless," the letter reads.
Recently, hackers managed to drain bank accounts across Germany. They did so not by hacking the banks themselves, but by exploiting a long-known flaw in a global telephony protocol known as Signaling System 7.
Politicians are becoming increasing aware and concerned about cybersecurity issues. One need look no further than two recent letters written by Senator Ron Wyden (D-Ore), senior member of the Senate Intelligence Committee, and Representative Ted Lieu (D-Calif.). Both are leading congressional advocates for stronger cybersecurity and privacy measures.
After acting Attorney General Sally Yates testified before a Senate panel on Monday and provided troubling details about how slow the White House was to act on information its then-national security adviser may have been compromised by Russia, President Trump took to Twitter to try and tamp the who
President Donald Trump abruptly fired FBI Director James Comey, prompting practically every member of Congress to weigh in. Many — including some prominent Republicans — are furious, dubbing the dismissal "Nixonian" and "a constitutional crisis."
Cyberwarfare can knock out physical machines and the attack can come from anywhere on the planet, reports Doug Olenick.
There is no simply way to rank the nation-state or criminal entity that poses the greatest cybersecurity threat to the United States – and the world in general.
Broadcaster Keith Olbermann praised former Acting Attorney General Sally Yates Monday as an "American hero," whose fearless testimony before a Senate committee "used to be the minimum standard for public servants." But "now, in the era of Trump, she stands out like a champion," he added.