- Requiem for a Dream—Aaron Swartz was brilliant and beloved. But the people who knew him best saw a darker side."
- Life Inside the Aaron Swartz Investigation—"A reluctant witness's account of a Federal prosecution."
- Aaron Swartz's partner accuses US of delaying investigation into prosecution—"Taren Stinebrickner-Kauffman says she's been told an out-of-date manifesto was a key element in the case against him."
- Aaron Swartz's Partner Accuses DOJ Of Lying, Seizing Evidence Without A Warrant & Withholding Exculpatory Evidence
- Attorney General: Aaron Swartz Case Was a 'Good Use of Prosecutorial Discretion'
- Inquiry widens into Swartz prosecution
- Aaron Swartz Was Right
- Part 1: No Prison Time For Violating Terms of Service
- Part 2: Protect Tinkerers, Security Researchers, Innovators, and Privacy Seekers
- Part 3: The Punishment Should Fit the Crime
- White House warns of dangers posed by WikiLeaks, LulzSec, other 'hacktivists'
- Google Exception in Obama's Cyber Order Questioned as Unwise Gap
- You Can't Delete Your Way Out Of Social Media
- Librarians Rally Behind Blogger Sued by Publisher Over Critical Comments
- iCloud e-mail "censorship" thanks to overzealous spam filtering
- Google Says the FBI Is Secretly Spying on Some of Its Customers
- Microsoft backs privacy bill in effort to keep Google Apps out of the classroom
- Anonymous leaks alleged data on BofA execs, surveillance—"Hacktivist group says 14GB of data includes evidence that Bank of America engaged in an effort to 'spy and collect information on private citizens.'"
- Firefox 22 will block third-party cookies—"Cookies from sites you visit? Good. Everything else? Blocked by default."
- VPN Services That Take Your Anonymity Seriously, 2013 Edition
- Supreme Court kills activists' challenge to FISA spying law
- Chinese Skype Surveillance Trigger Words Uncovered by Researcher
- Canada: OK for police to search cellphone if no password, says court
- Court curbs Homeland Security's laptop border searches
- Reding fights US to protect Europeans' data rights
- Majority of doctors opposed to full access to your own electronic records—"A survey of 3,700 doctors in eight countries revealed that only 31 percent believe that patients should have full access to their own medical records via electronic means."
- U of I shared student info even if no threat posed
- Officials admit selling information to UK newspapers