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How Russia is weaponising information
- Sam Jones
An online 'auction' of weapons believed stolen from the NSA signals an intensifying cyber war between the US and Russia.
Hacks cause surge in cyber insurance
- Beverley Head
Insurance giant Aon has already brokered more cyber insurance policies to Australian organisations in 2016 than it did in the whole of 2015.
Census fallout tests Turnbull government
- Laura Tingle
The Turnbull Government was scrambling to reassure the community as systems failures opened the prospect of the collapse of the 2016 Census.
Russian hackers meant to leave a mark
- John Walcott, Joseph Menn and Mark Hosenball
US intelligence officials think Moscow's may be be showing off its 'cyberpower' credentials
Forgot your PIN? Look real close at the ATM
- Michael Corkery
PIN codes may soon die as cyber-hack worries prompt the increased use of retina and fingerprint scans for bank transactions.
Clintons attacked by Russian hackers
- Michael Riley and Jordan Robertson
The Clinton Foundation was among the organisations breached by suspected Russian hackers.
The four kinds of cyber attack and how to stop them
Admitting to a cyber breach in corporate Australia is like admitting to an STD - an embarrassing ailment sufferers would only admit to a qualified professional. Malcolm Turnbull says it's time to come clean.
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- Video
Big defence spend makes Australia a lethal military force in Asia
Australia will be a much more lethal military force in the Indo-Pacific region if the ambitious defence expansion plans laid out in this past week's white paper for the army, navy and air force are implemented by the federal government and its successors.
- Contains:
- Infographics
'Russian Zuckerberg' backs Apple in iPhone security battle
- Eric Auchard
Founder of secure messaging app Telegram and the Russian Facebook VKontakte, lives in the vortex pitting Apple against the FBI.
Clinton enlists tech firms in battle to stop ISIS
- DAVID E. SANGER and AMY CHOZICK
Hillary Clinton has called for technology companies around the world to cooperate with the government to stop the Islamic State from using the internet to recruit members. But some techies are reluctant to become the government's censor.