CIA launches a podcast, hoping to ‘demystify’ the agency and boost recruitment

California tech billionaire launches Senate campaign to take on Tesla

IRS: Stolen property must be reported as income on taxes

McClatchy, second largest local news co., files bankruptcy

Cancers strike US military deployed to Uzbekistan

Veterans want answers as new data shows rise in cancers over two decades of war

Fake, misleading social media posts exploding globally, Oxford study finds

Ancestry wants your spit, your DNA and your trust. Should you give them all three?

FBI Says Chinese Operatives Active at Scores of U.S. Universities

DHS weighs major change to H-1B foreign tech worker visa program

Jailed Russian says he hacked DNC on Kremlin’s orders and can prove it

U.S. does not believe Cuba is behind sonic attacks on American diplomats

US Navy collisions stoke cyber threat concerns

Is Alexa spying on us? We're too busy to care — and we might regret that

Secret court rebukes NSA for 5-year illegal surveillance of U.S. citizens

U.S. sweeping up Russian hackers in a broad global dragnet

Former employees sue Microsoft after developing PTSD

WikiLeaks claims sham U.S. firm is trying to smear Assange

Update Your iPhone or iPad: Israeli Cyber-spy Firm Can Hack You

The Obama Administration’s Top Official Overseeing How Intelligence Agencies Handle Whistleblower Retaliation Claims Has Lodged His Own Complaint, Alleging He Was Punished For Disclosing “Public Corruption.”

Irradiated: The hidden legacy of 70 years of atomic weaponry

Obama and Rand Paul Face Off Over the Patriot Act

The federal government can read any emails that are more than six months old without a warrant: the “180-day rule” allows officials to treat any emails, text messages or documents stored on remote servers as “abandoned” and therefore accessible using administrative subpoena power

Three years later, Pentagon unit still hides Internet voting test results

Obama’s crackdown views leaks as aiding enemies of U.S.