FILTER RESULTS
FILTER RESULTS
close.svg
Search Result for “police stations”

Showing 1 - 3 of 3

OPINION

Until it gets hacked, e-government sounds just great

News, Leonid Bershidsky, Published on 23/11/2017

» A group of Czech security researchers earlier this year discovered a way to steal identities from electronic ID cards used in a number of countries, known in the cryptography industry as a ROCA vulnerability. So far, the vulnerability has caused problems in Estonia -- the country with perhaps the most comprehensive e-identification and e-government system in the world -- and in Spain. Former Estonian president Toomas Hendrik Ilves, a tireless promoter of his country's e-democracy, has said that other countries and institutions have the same problem, too; they're just not talking openly about it. He's very likely right.

Image-Content

OPINION

Safer vehicles can make terrorist strikes much harder

News, Leonid Bershidsky, Published on 07/06/2017

» 'Enough is enough," UK Prime Minister Theresa May declared after the London terror attack on Saturday night, the third one this year. But what she proposed to counter the terrorist attacks was, essentially, some freedom of speech restrictions, more powers for law enforcement and longer sentences for terror-related offenses -- the same old toolbox that has been used for almost two decades.

Image-Content

OPINION

Facebook can't have it both ways

News, Leonid Bershidsky, Published on 24/03/2017

» Nearly everyone has criticism for German Justice Minister Heiko Maas's proposal to impose fines on social networks and their workers for failure to delete hateful content. Internet freedom advocates hate it for imposing censorship. The European Union is concerned for the same reason and the German union of judges and prosecutors criticise it for not going far enough because the posters of hate-speech themselves escape punishment.