PCWorld

WikiLeaks dump brings CIA spying powers into the spotlight

Make smart purchases, stay safe online.

HAS THE CIA ever spied on you? That’s a key question swirling around the WikiLeaks document dump (go.pcworld.com/wlcia) that allegedly details the U.S. agency’s secret hacking tools.

The documents themselves don’t reveal much about who the CIA might have snooped on. But the agency certainly has the power to spy on foreigners outside the U.S., said Paul Pillar, a former deputy counterterrorism chief with the CIA.

That’s its job after all: to collect foreign

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from PCWorld

PCWorld4 min read
Lexar SL600: A Fast, Affordable Portable SSD In A Unique Guise
Lexar’s SL600 is a worthy contender for your 20Gbps USB storage bucks. It doesn’t blow away the competition in either price or performance, but it matches them—and does so with style. The Lexar SL600 is a 20Gbps USB 3.2×2 (Superspeed 20Gbps) external
PCWorld4 min read
How To Digitize And Declutter Your CDs And DVDs
A while I back, I wrote a column for TechHive on ways to rent or buy DVDs without Netflix’s now-dead DVD service. So it’s only fitting to now write the opposite story, about how to declutter the optical media you no longer want. First, we’ll go over
PCWorld5 min read
Be Safe! How I Set Up A ‘Paranoid PC’ To Surf The Risky Web
In the 1990s, a colleague took me to “Snake Alley,” Taipei’s red-light district, for a night of drinking with “entertainers” and some of their very muscled, serious friends. A good time was had by all, fortunately. Still, I was young, dumb, and very

Related