censorshipSecurityA Startup Allegedly ‘Hacked the World.’ Then Came the Censorship—and Now the BacklashBy Andy GreenbergSecurityInside America’s School Internet Censorship MachineBy Todd Feathers and Dhruv MehrotraPoliticsThis New Tool Aims to Keep Terrorism Content Off the InternetBy David GilbertPoliticsHere’s How Violent Extremists Are Exploiting Generative AI ToolsBy David GilbertBusinessThe UK’s Controversial Online Safety Act Is Now LawBy Peter GuestBusinessPalestinians Claim Social Media ‘Censorship’ Is Endangering LivesBy Lila HassanSecurityThey Supported Air Strike Victims. Then They Were Doxed and ArrestedBy Matt BurgessSecurityThe UN Risks Normalizing Internet CensorshipBy Justin LingIdeasAI Chatbots Are Learning to Spout Authoritarian PropagandaBy Allie Funk, Adrian Shahbaz, and Kian VesteinssonBusinessIndia Is Using Terrorism Laws to Target JournalistsBy Parth M.N.SecurityA Tricky New Way to Sneak Past Repressive Internet CensorshipBy Justin LingIdeasIn the War Between Harassment and Censorship, No One WinsBy Katherine Alejandra CrossBusinessThe UK Is Poised to Force a Bad Law on the InternetBy Peter GuestBusinessIt Costs Just $400 to Build an AI Disinformation MachineBy Will KnightIdeasCould AI-Generated Porn Help Protect Children?By Danielle BernsteinIdeasThe All-American Myth of the TikTok SpyBy Yangyang ChengIdeasThe Internet Speech Case That the Supreme Court Can’t DodgeBy Jeff KosseffSecurityCall of Duty Players Hit With Self-Spreading MalwareBy Matt Burgess and Andrew CoutsBusinessIt’s Getting Harder for the Government to Secretly Flag Your Social PostsBy Paresh DaveIdeasIt's Twilight of the Mods for Bluesky and RedditBy Katherine Alejandra CrossBusinessTikTok Keeps Removing Abortion Pill ContentBy Vittoria ElliottSecurityThe Bizarre Reality of Getting Online in North KoreaBy Matt BurgessSecurityThe Messy US Influence That’s Helping Iranians Stay OnlineBy Lily Hay NewmanBusinessDeepfakes, Cheapfakes, and Twitter Censorship Mar Turkey’s ElectionsBy Demetrios IoannouMore Stories