Josephine Wolff is an assistant professor in Rochester Institute of Technology’s Public Policy Department and an extended faculty member of the Computing Security Department. She is a faculty associate at Harvard Berkman Center for Internet and Society and a fellow at the New America Cybersecurity Initiative. She researches cybersecurity policy and is working on a project about cybersecurity incidents in the past decade, tracing their economic and legal aftermath and their impact on technical, social, and political lines of defense. She writes regularly about cybersecurity for Slate, and her writing has appeared in The Atlantic, Scientific American, The New Republic, Newsweek, and the New York Times Opinionator blog.
Previously
So much of who we are and what defines us—as individuals, businesses, and organizations—is captured in data that resides in the cloud. A few lines of code can dismantle busine...
The mounting tension between privacy and security hit another inflection point when the FBI filed a suit against Apple earlier this year. Although the highest-profile case to...