How the CIA Grows Tech
When scientists at Redlen Technologies invented a new manufacturing process for a specialized semiconductor, they knew the medical industry would be intrigued.
- Jun. 17, 2013
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C4ISR NewsWhen scientists at Redlen Technologies invented a new manufacturing process for a specialized semiconductor, they knew the medical industry would be intrigued.
Booz Allen is recruiting a new 'systems administrator' with a security clearance in Hawaii.
The US government, which has used missile-armed UAVs to kill hundreds in Pakistan and Yemen, is looking for ways to ward off the same kind of attacks on its own officials.
The criminal investigation into who leaked key documents on the government's secret electronic snooping programs had only just started when a 29-year-old federal contract employee came forward and claimed responsibility.
Desperate for clues in the wake of the Boston bombings, law enforcement officials asked the public to deluge them with videos and cellphone photos taken near the Boston Marathon finish line.
In a sense — and in one sense only — American and NATO forces have had it easy in Iraq and Afghanistan.
The recent disclosure that the Obama administration has secretly been collecting the phone records of millions of Americans is a reminder just how much of a digital trail people leave in modern communications.
In October, the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency premiered its most ambitious humanoid robot contest ever: a competition to build robots that could replace humans in disaster areas like the 2011 multiple-reactor meltdown at Japan's Fukushima nucl
Smartphone vulnerability is a prickly issue, a tradeoff between the alluring conveniences the devices offer and the risks they bring.
It was an ordinary spring day on the southeast coast of Spain when an Israeli-built maritime Heron 1 unmanned aerial vehicle took off at 11 a.m. from San Javier Air Base in Murcia.
In the spring of 1994, President Clinton approved the creation of the National Polar-orbiting Operational Environmental Satellite System, a project that would aggregatethe weather-tracking capabilities of the Air Force, NASA and the National Oceanic and A
Earlier this year, leaders of U.S. Southern Command told Congress that ISR support provided to nations south of Mexico had led to more than '32 high-value narco-terrorists killed in action.' Just who were these individuals killed with U.S.
A European Defence Agency (EDA) study of the military cyberdefense capabilities across 20 EU countries released here May 24 has identified training, education and cyber situational awareness as among the 'most pressing gaps.'
Late last year, a small Alabama defense firm hit the big leagues.
An MQ-4C Triton Unmanned Aircraft System — previously known as the Broad Area Maritime System (BAMS) — took to the air for the first time last Wednesday, completing an 80-minute flight around southern California.
The US Defense Department's desire to create an unprecedented cadre of military spies is one step closer to becoming a clandestine reality.
The Defense Department will allow government-issued iPhones and iPads to connect to the military's networks, the Pentagon announced Friday.
Col. Charles Wells is the program manager for the Army's Distributed Common Ground System, the service's effort to integrate all streams of intelligence.
The Obama administration has floated the idea of putting the CIA's controversial targeted killing operations under the control of the armed services.
In 1989, two small U.S. planes took off in Colombia's expansive Aburra Valley, the first flights of a surveillance operation that would ultimately reshape the American way of war.