Ido Kilovaty, Lawfare

Ido Kilovaty

Lawfare

New Haven, CT, United States

Contact Ido

Discover and connect with journalists and influencers around the world, save time on email research, monitor the news, and more.

Start free trial

Recent:
  • Unknown
Past:
  • Lawfare
  • TechCrunch
  • Just Security

Past articles by Ido:

Are Tech Companies Becoming the Primary Legislators in International Cyberspace?

Failure by governments to agree on international cyber norms has left a vacuum that tech firms such as Microsoft aim to fill. → Read More

The Cambridge Analytica Debacle is not a Facebook “Data Breach.” Maybe It Should Be.

Ido Kilovaty Contributor Share on Twitter Ido Kilovaty is a Cyber Fellow at the Center for Global Legal Challenges and Resident Fellow at the Information Society Project, Yale Law School. More posts by this contributor If it talks like a government and acts like a government, it must be a tech giant On March 16, […] → Read More

The Equifax Aftermath – We Need More Hacking

Incentivizing ethical hacking, rather than only pursuing traditional forms of regulation, could help prevent major breaches. → Read More

The Equifax Aftermath – We Need More Hacking

Incentivizing ethical hacking, rather than pursuing only traditional forms of regulation, could help prevent major breaches. → Read More

Ido Kilovaty

TechCrunch is a leading technology media property, dedicated to obsessively profiling startups, reviewing new Internet products, and breaking tech news. → Read More

If it talks like a government and acts like a government, it must be a tech giant

The ACLU reported last year that law enforcement teamed up with Geofeedia, a software company that uses social media data to track and monitor protesters. Many were outraged. Facebook and Twitter cut off Geofeedia’s access to their data. These new rules have far-reaching implications for companies whose business models revolve around utilizing social media data for close observations. → Read More

If it talks like a government and acts like a government, it must be a tech giant

The ACLU reported last year that law enforcement teamed up with Geofeedia, a software company that uses social media data to track and monitor protesters. Many were outraged. Facebook and Twitter cut off Geofeedia’s access to their data. These new rules have far-reaching implications for companies whose business models revolve around utilizing social media data for close observations. → Read More

Yafit Lev-Aretz

TechCrunch is a leading technology media property, dedicated to obsessively profiling startups, reviewing new Internet products, and breaking tech news. → Read More

Towards a Cyber-Security Treaty

The Democratic National Convention (DNC) leaks revealed last week have presumably reminded many Americans to the severe cyber-threats this country is → Read More

The Democratic National Committee Hack: Information as Interference

Earlier this month, WikiLeaks released nearly 20,000 e-mails belonging to Democratic National Committee’s top officials, where Senator Bernie → Read More

Will “Cyber Bonds” Mitigate Transnational Cyberspace Threats?

A Forum on Law, Rights, and U.S. National Security → Read More