How close is TikTok to being banned in the US? Find out why Congress is citing national security to force ByteDance's hand. Unravel the details behind the looming deadline. FOLLOW our in-depth analysis for insights.
Resignation of Michael Flynn as White House Security Advisor has drawn different responses from public, but his decision is the best course for the government
Trump tries to figure out why there is such a ruckus over cybersecurity when he states that no computer is safe, leaving many to question what can really be considered a safe way for passing information these days.
Former NRC employee pleads guilty to a federal computer crime when he admitted he planned to launch an attack that would expose “top secret” information of the government to other nations.
The legal quagmire that Democratic presidential nominee and former Secretary of State, Hillary Clinton, finds herself in, sink into deeper complications depending on how. a D..C appeals court will rule over an unrelated case science-technology emails being issued by a public servant over a private email server.
A U.S. lawmaker introduced a bill aiming to toughen the vetting process for refugees seeking to enter the United States as Republican leaders in Congress sought to block Syrians fleeing war in their country.
Just minutes after being locked up for 30 years for insulting Thailand’s monarchy, Pongsak Sriboonpeng described what he thought was the cause of his capture: a poorly chosen Facebook friend.
A Russian lawyer for Edward Snowden said on Tuesday the fugitive former U.S. spy agency contractor who leaked details of the government's mass surveillance programs was working with American and German lawyers to return home.
U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder will announce on Monday revisions to federal law enforcement guidelines that are designed to limit profiling and set an example for local police, according to a Justice Department official.
Miriam Carey, a dental hygienist from Stamford Connecticut, who rammed her Black Nexus into the White House gate, then led Washington D.C. police on a chase down Pennsylvania Avenue before being shot by authorities, reportedly had a history of mental illness,
The military judge Colonel Denise Lind who is overseeing the court-martial of Pfc. Bradley Manning denied defense motions seeking to throw out two charges against him, including the most serious one of aiding the enemy. That charge would carry a maximum penalty of life in prison. Colonel Lind said the government had met the burden to present evidence that the crimes had been committed.
In his first congressional testimony since disclosure of the secretive programs, the director of the National Security Agency gave a forceful defense of spy operations that have stirred fears of government snooping and violations of privacy rights
29-year-old Edward Snowden, the former CIA computer technician, and self-proclaimed whistleblower, reportedly gave classified documents to reporters, making public two sweeping U.S. surveillance programs and touching off a national firestorm over the weekend
The Obama administration acknowledged for the first time Wednesday that four American citizens have been killed in drone strikes in Pakistan and Yemen since 2009. The disclosure to Congress comes before the president is due to make a major national security speech, with plans to pledge more transparency to Congress in his counter-terrorism policy.
Erwin Antonio Rios, a North Carolina man, pleaded guilty on Tuesday in U.S. District Court for possessing a stolen firearm as part of a personal jihad to kill U.S. Army soldiers.
James Everett Dutschke, a 41-year-old martial arts instructor appeared in federal court on Monday to face charges in connection with mailing letters containing the deadly poison ricin to President Barack Obama and other U.S. officials. Dutschke responded briefly to a judge's questions at the hearing in Oxford, Mississippi, on whether he understood the charges against him. The judge then ordered a preliminary hearing be held on Thursday when prosecutors will present more detailed evidence in the case.
Officials said Terminal 4 at John F. Kennedy International was briefly evacuated on Sunday afternoon because of a suspicious package discovered in the bag room from El Al Airlines.
At least two people are dead and dozens injured - including up to 10 with amputated limbs - after two bombs tore through the finish line of the Boston Marathon, at the heart of downtown Boston.