The maker of SteathGenie, a popular eavesdropping and surveillance smartphone app that’s marketed as a tool to catch cheating spouses and significant others, has been indicted.
Prosecutors in Boston say a new DNA test offers proof that they have charged the correct identical twin in the rapes and robberies of two women in 2004.
New York’s highest court has upheld the “home rule” powers of even the smallest localities to ban fracking in order to preserve their rural and small-town character, Bloomberg News…
Updated: The federal government is putting pressure on local law enforcement to keep quiet about its use of Stingray and other surveillance technology used to…
A lawsuit filed on Wednesday seeks to prod the U.S. Department of Agriculture to take action on meat tainted with antibiotic-resistant strains of salmonella.
The U.S. Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit has given Oracle a big win in its suit claiming Google used its patented and copyrighted Java technology in Android software.
Some of the largest tech companies in the country are no longer complying with secret governmental demands for information and data. Instead, they’re actually telling users that they’re being targeted.
A federal judge has ordered the release of a Chicago-area woman who has spent nearly a decade in prison for the shaken-baby death of a 3½-month-old infant in her care.
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