censorshipSecuritySan Francisco Subway Shuts Cell Service to Foil Protest; Legal Debate IgnitesBy David KravetsSecurityFeds Defend Internet Domain Seizure in Piracy CrackdownBy David KravetsSecurityStates May Not Ban Sale, Rental of Violent Videogames to MinorsBy David KravetsSecuritySchools May Punish Students for Off-Campus, Online SpeechBy David KravetsSecurityU.S. Faces Legal Challenge to Internet-Domain SeizuresBy David KravetsYA Too Dark? I Think Not. YA Saves.By Suzanne LazearSecurityU.N. Report Declares Internet Access a Human RightBy David KravetsSecurityInternet Researchers Decry DNS-Filtering LegislationBy David KravetsSecuritySenator Blocks Bill Giving Feds Power to Blacklist Piracy SitesBy David KravetsGearCensorship Shades Put Black Strip Over Your EyesBy Charlie SorrelSecurityFeds Demand Firefox Remove Add-On That Redirects Seized DomainsBy David KravetsSecurityCourt OKs Firing of Boeing Computer-Security WhistleblowersBy David KravetsSecurityNeo-Nazi Freed, Online Speech ProtectedBy David KravetsSecurityFederal Courts Worry Your Smartphone Might Be a BombBy David KravetsSecurityDefining Internet 'Freedom': Ars Interviews Senator Al FrankenBy Nate Anderson, Ars TechnicaSecurityClinton Demands Net Freedom Abroad as Domestic Restrictions LoomBy David KravetsSecurityResearcher Makes Free Phone and Text Encryption Available to EgyptBy Kim ZetterSecuritySony to Inspect PlayStation Hacker's Hard DriveBy David KravetsSecurityReport: Egypt Shut Down Net With Big Switch, Not Phone CallsBy Ryan SingelSecuritySony Lawyers Expand Dragnet, Targeting Anybody Posting PlayStation 3 HackBy David KravetsSecurityIran, China Block Outside Sites to Muzzle Mideast NewsBy Adam RawnsleySecurityEgypt Returns to the InternetBy Ryan SingelSecurityPhone Tweets Trickling Out of EgyptBy David KravetsSecurityEgypt's Last-Standing ISP Goes DarkBy David KravetsMore Stories