politicsBusinessBiometric security hacks threaten to ruin the KeyLemon partyBy Mark PiesingCultureObservation Deck: Science vs. Politics EditionBy Adam RogersSecurityMobile-Phone Surveillance by Police Targets Millions AnnuallyBy David KravetsCultureChinese iPad Game Depicts Slaughter of Stereotypical JapaneseBy Daniel FeitPhotoVeterans' Photo Scrapbooking Offers New Therapy, Window Into ExperiencesBy Pete BrookSecurityEuropean Parliament Kills Global Anti-Piracy Accord ACTABy David KravetsSecurityGovernment Demands Growing for Twitter User DataBy David KravetsBusinessThe 2012 Wired 100By WIRED InsiderPhotoAward-Winning Project Documents a Fractured SerbiaBy Pete BrookSecurityFrom Copyright to Surveillance to Torture, Supreme Court Term Ends MixedBy David KravetsSecuritySupreme Court Upholds Right to Lie About Military HonorsBy David KravetsSecurityUncle Sam Wants You! ... to Combat Online PiracyBy David KravetsBetween the Bookends at GeekMomBy Kris BordessaSecuritySupreme Court Refuses to Say S*** About Legality of Cursing on TVBy David KravetsComics as Literature, Part 5: Impolite Dinner ConversationBy Jonathan H. LiuPhotoPhoto Book Paints Cosmetic Surgery Offices as Beauty FactoriesBy Jakob SchillerSecurityHouse Committee Approves Sweeping, Warrantless Electronic Spy PowersBy David KravetsSecurityRetired Judge Joins Fight Against DOJ's 'Outrageous' Seizures in Megaupload CaseBy David KravetsSecuritySupreme Court Rejects 'Dirty Bomber' CaseBy David KravetsJourney to the Steampunk World's FairBy WIRED StaffSecurityACLU Phone App Lets You Shoot the CopsBy David KravetsSecurityCourt Halts Law Allowing Indefinite Detention of AmericansBy David KravetsCultureRay Bradbury on Sci-Fi, God and Robots: The Late Author's Biggest IdeasBy Angela WatercutterSecurityJudge Ties Up Online Sex-Advertising LawBy David KravetsMore Stories