Sunshine and SecrecyIdeasIt’s Time to Stop Arresting People for Trolling the GovernmentBy Jeff KosseffIdeasThe Quiet Invasion of 'Big Information'By Sarah LamdanIdeasHow the FBI’s Mar-a-Lago Raid Could Expose Trump’s SecretsBy Amy GajdaIdeasThe Roe v. Wade Opinion Is Not the First Supreme Court LeakBy Amy GajdaIdeasTransparency Laws Let Criminal Records Become CommoditiesBy Sarah Esther LagesonSecurityPolice Contract With Spy Tool Maker Prohibits Talking About Device's UseBy Kim ZetterSecurityFeds Refuse to Release Public Comments on NSA Reform — Citing PrivacyBy David KravetsSecurityWhy AT&T's Surveillance Report Omits 80 Million NSA TargetsBy David KravetsSecurityReading Between the Lines of Redacted NSA DocumentsBy David KravetsSecurityTech Giants, Telcos Get OK to Release Stats on NSA SpyingBy David KravetsSecurityNSA Transparency Hurts Americans' Privacy, Feds Say With Straight FaceBy David KravetsSecuritySecret Service Report Noted Aaron Swartz's 'Depression Problems'By Kevin PoulsenSecuritySecret Spy Court Demands Surveillance Transparency From FedsBy David KravetsSecurity6 Whopping Government Misstatements About NSA SpyingBy David KravetsSecurityFacebook Gave 38K Users' Data to Governments in 6 MonthsBy David KravetsSecurityOsama Bin Laden Photo Flap Heading to Supreme CourtBy David KravetsSecurityLawmakers Who Upheld NSA Phone Spying Received Double the Defense Industry CashBy David KravetsSecurityMIT Moves to Intervene in Release of Aaron Swartz's Secret Service FileBy Kevin PoulsenSecurityCalifornia High Court Boosts Public-Records Law With Ruling on Mapping DataBy David KravetsSecurityActivists Flood Government Agencies With FOIA Requests in Tribute to Aaron SwartzBy Kim ZetterSecurityDid Bush's Broadband Deregulation Upend His Own NSA Wiretapping?By Julian SanchezSecurityJustice Department Sues Telecom for Challenging National Security LetterBy Kim ZetterSecurityOpen Letter to Internet Companies: Tell Us How Much We Are Being SurveilledBy David KravetsSecurityJustice Dept. Defends Public's Constitutional 'Right to Record' CopsBy Kim ZetterMore Stories