-
Bringing the fight against censorship to one of its most important strongholds.
-
Reports say that former coworkers of Peiter 'Mudge' Zatko, who blew the whistle on Twitter for allegedly lax enforcement of data privacy rules, have been offered money in exchange for damaging information about him. Zatko used to be in charge of Twitter's cybersecurity, and he was the one who blew the whistle.
-
A court filing from Monday says that Elon Musk has sent a subpoena to a Twitter whistleblower, asking for documents and communications about the company's spam and alleged security flaws. The billionaire is fighting to get out of a $44 billion deal to buy Twitter.
-
On Sept. 13, the Senate Judiciary Committee will meet with Peiter 'Mudge' Zatko, who used to be Twitter's head of security, to talk about his whistleblower complaint, which says that the social media company lied to regulators.
-
Experts told The Post that the bombshell claims made by Twitter's former head of cybersecurity, who said the company was careless with user data and lied to the government about it, could give regulators a chance to crack down on large tech firms.
-
Following the death of Antonin Scalia, then-Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-KY) opted to postpone Barack Obama's SCOTUS pick, Merrick Garland, in 2016. This saved the whole country.
-
Tesla has won its case against a whistleblower who was fired for hacking and transferring company data to a news publication. The electric automaker had filed a lawsuit against former Gigafactory employee Martin Tripp in 2018 after he got caught leaking an exposé to Business Insider. According to the information Tripp leaked, Tesla was shipping …
-
President Trump blasted “CBS Evening News” host Norah O’Donnell as a “third place anchor” after she interviewed a coronavirus whistleblower for a “60 Minutes” segment that was critical of the White House. In a Twitter rant late Sunday, Trump said O’Donnell and “60 Minutes” were “doing everything in their power to demean our Country, much to …
-
Democrats declined to require Dr. Rick Bright, the “whistleblower” who appeared before the House on Thursday, to testify under oath as he told a subcommittee that the Trump administration had not responded adequately to the coronavirus pandemic. Bright, the former director of the Biomedical Advanced Research and Development Authority (BARDA), was reassigned last month to …