Western law enforcement agencies have become more assertive in responding to international cyber crime, including through their own disruptive cyber operations. This growing trend is generally a positive one, but it also poses new policy challenges—both domestically and abroad.
What does Prussian naturalist Alexander Von Humboldt have to do with cybersecurity?
If the United States is drawn into a new war in the next few years, what will that look like? Will the government deploy troops and heavy arms to a front in Eastern Europe or naval forces to the Taiwan Strait?
Namibia’s rapidly growing digital finance sector offers policymakers an opportunity to develop processes and regulations that suit the country’s unique human geography and cultural context.
The Kremlin’s response to the Crocus City Hall terrorist attack demonstrates the risks when political leaders prize loyalty over competence from their national security bureaucracies.
American leaders and scholars have long feared the prospect that hostile foreign powers could subvert democracy by spreading false, misleading, and inflammatory information by using various media.
Kyiv’s Western backers need to grasp that drones are no substitute for a capable fighting force.
Ukrainians have proven remarkably resilient, bouncing back from each disruption with resolve.
Africa leads the world in mobile money adoption while cyber attacks and fraud are rising. How are new efforts faring to increase security and trust in digital financial inclusion?
For the EU’s Artificial Intelligence Act to set a global benchmark for AI regulation, the resulting standards need to balance detail and legal clarity with flexibility to adapt to the emerging technologies.