“After terror attacks in Paris and San Bernardino turned the focus of the 2016 presidential race to national security, Republican candidate Carly Fiorina warned voters today that the U.S. remains vulnerable to massive, crippling cyberattacks.
In a Pearl Harbor Day speech to voters in Cedar Rapids, Iowa, the former Hewlett-Packard CEO touted her background in the technology world — a world accustomed to using Pearl Harbor-like terminology to describe the damage that could be done by a major attack on U.S. infrastructure like power grids or traffic control.”
President Trump’s first 24 hours in the White House have certainly been the talking point here in Davos, as business leaders and politicians digest what…
New York Times subscribers, by type The New York Times is exploring bundled subscription partnerships with smaller publishers to expand its subscriber base in the…
Evan Feigenbaum of the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, and a former Deputy Assistant Secretary of State explains how Taiwan could become a bargaining chip…