The Pentagon’s latest report makes one thing clear: Signal protects conversations, but it was never designed to safeguard U.S. war plans — and using it that way carried real risk for American forces.
A Pentagon inspector general report concluded that Secretary of War Pete Hegseth sent sensitive, nonpublic strike information over the encrypted app Signal using his personal phone, a violation of ...
The Pentagon inspector general found Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth’s use of the Signal messaging app to discuss sensitive Yemen strike plans risked exposing U.S. tactics and endangering troops — even ...
Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth risked compromising sensitive military information, which could have endangered American troops and mission objectives, when he used Signal in March of this year to ...
EE427 Video Signal Processing ├─1.Exam │ 21-S1-Q1-v4.pdf │ 21-S1-Q2-v2.pdf │ 21-S1-Q3-v5.pdf │ 21-S1-Q4-NO.pdf │ 21-S1-Q5-NO.pdf │ 22-S1-Q1-v3.pdf │ 22-S1-Q2-v2.pdf │ 22-S1-Q3-v2.pdf │ 22-S1-Q4-v3.pdf ...
Signal has updated its Windows app to protect users' privacy by blocking Microsoft's AI-powered Recall feature from taking screenshots of their conversations. This new privacy feature, dubbed "screen ...
It was connected to the internet on an unsecured commercial line, sources said. Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth used the Signal app on a personal computer in his office that was connected to the ...
Signal, for most normal people, for confidential, for conversations and phone calls that are confidential, that are just private -- we call it private in public life. Signal is the best you can do.
This is your signal to invest in secure messaging. After The Atlantic’s editor-in-chief, Jeffrey Goldberg, was mistakenly added to a Signal group chat involving top White House officials, it begs the ...
With news this week of the messaging app being used to discuss war plans, we get you up to speed on what Signal should be used for—and what it shouldn’t. MIT Technology Review Explains: Let our ...
The Presidential Records Act and the Federal Records Act require officials to preserve communications related to government business. By Luke Broadwater Luke Broadwater is a White House correspondent.
Aimee Picchi is the associate managing editor for CBS MoneyWatch, where she covers business and personal finance. She previously worked at Bloomberg News and has written for national news outlets ...