terrorismBusinessSyria's destroyed Palmyra Arch has been rebuilt in LondonBy Matt BurgessSecurityDark Web's Got a Bad Rep: 7 in 10 People Want It Shut Down, Study ShowsBy Andy GreenbergScienceBrussels Bombs Show the Special Vulnerabilities of SubwaysBy Eric NiilerSecurityHack Brief: ISIS Data Breach Identifies 22,000 MembersBy Andy GreenbergScienceMathematical models could predict the next terrorist attackBy Emily ReynoldsSecurityApple and FBI Take Their iPhone Hacking Fight to CongressBy Brian BarrettOpinionForcing Apple to Hack That iPhone Sets a Dangerous PrecedentBy Congressman Darrell IssaSecurityApple Says the Government Bungled Its Chance to Get That iPhone's DataBy Kim ZetterSecurityApple's FBI Battle Is Complicated. Here's What's Really Going OnBy Kim ZetterBusinessApple's Noble Stand Against the FBI Is Also Great BusinessBy Klint FinleySecurityMagistrate Orders Apple to Help FBI Hack San Bernardino Shooter's PhoneBy Kim ZetterBusinessFacebook's anti-terror plan: free adverts for counter extremistsBy Matt KamenBusinessTwitter Wants You to Know That It Is Fighting TerroristsBy Julia GreenbergBusinessTech giants insist to MPs they are 'dedicated' to stopping crimeBy Emily ReynoldsGearUK at risk from 'simple and effective' terrorist drone attacksBy Matt BurgessBusinessWhite House Says New Task Force Will Fight Terrorism OnlineBy Issie LapowskyBusinessTwitter's Latest Challenge: Deciding Who's a TerroristBy Jessi HempelBusinessFear-Mongering Politicians Will Make Tech 2016's ScapegoatBy Jason TanzBusinessChina says sweeping new snooping laws match UK and USBy Michael RundleSecurityObama Says the Feds Vet Social Media Before Issuing VisasBy Issie LapowskySecuritySecurity This Week: The Government Really Doesn't Seem to Like EncryptionBy Yael Grauer BusinessNo, France won't be banning public Wi-Fi or TorBy K.G. OrphanidesSecurityFBI director says companies should ditch encryptionBy Cara McGooganBusinessFacebook defends terrorism policy after Paris attacksBy Matt BurgessMore Stories