Homeland Security Today\'s David Silverberg discusses why DHS is reluctant to back off from the new airport security measures.
The Transportation Security Administration says airline pilots will be allowed to skip some physical security checks at airports.
The National Trust for Historic Preservation sues to turn DoD\'s plans for a firing range on Guam over. The trust\'s Brian Turner explains what\'s at stake.
A malicious computer attack that appears to target Iran\'s nuclear plants can be modified to wreak havoc on industrial control systems around the world, and represents the most dire cyberthreat known to industry, government officials and experts said Wednesday.
NASA\'s inspector general designated information technology security as one of eight top management and performance challenges the space agency faces.
John Pistole, the head of the Transportation Security Administration, is hit with questions about new pat-down techniques that air passengers have complained are invasive. The Hill\'s Bob Cusack tells us about yesterday\'s hearing.
Cranky travelers, complaining pilots, air marshals sent to the back of the plane... Jon Adler, president of FLEOA, looks at why we can\'t all just get along.
The anger toward the TSA pat-downs and scans is all over the Internet, but can this discontent translate into real action?
Slashdot and Threatpost report that the secretive NSA uses development methods that are public knowledge.
When President Obama announced the plot had been dusrupted on October 29th, JJ Green had an *aha* moment.
Intelligence officials around the world narrowly thwarted an al-Qaida mail bomb plot last month, intercepting two explosive packages shipped from Yemen with UPS and FedEx. Fred Burton says human intelligence has become key to the search.
Allan Friedman, a fellow at the Brookings Institution, describes how to maintain security and privacy in the cloud computing age.
Big Republican gains in Congress could make it harder for President Barack Obama to keep his pledge to start bringing U.S. troops home from Afghanistan by next summer. We get an update on how things are going there from Rear Adm. Greg Smith.
Defense Secretary Robert M. Gates is on a whirlwind trip to Australia and Malaysia, where he will reinforce the U.S. commitment to the region with a longstanding U.S. ally and an increasingly close partner.
The Office of Personnel Management\'s plan to build a data system with millions of American\'s health care claims is raising concerns about privacy.