Skip to main content
Cloudy icon
83º
WPLG logo

Go to the WPLG homepage

    • News
    • Watch Live
    • Traffic
    • Local 10 Investigates
    • This Week In South Florida
    • Dirty Dining/Clean Plate
    • Digi Shorts
    • National
    • Politics
    • Cuba
    • Animal Advocate
    • Don't Trash Our Treasure
    • Health
    • Weird News
    • Weather
    • Alerts
    • Hurricane
    • Florida Pins
    • Hollywood Beach Cam
    • Miami Downtown Cam
    • Key West Cam
    • Miami Beach Cam
    • Fort Lauderdale Cam
    • Pembroke Park Cam
    • Sports
    • Dolphins
    • Heat
    • Marlins
    • Panthers
    • Inter Miami CF
    • Miami Hurricanes
    • Features
    • SoFlo Shows
    • SoFlo Health
    • SoFlo Taste
    • SoFlo Recipes
    • SoFlo Home Project
    • UHealth
    • Pets
    • Food
    • Fresh
    • Community
    • Mom to Mom
    • NEXTGEN TV
    • Tech
    • Travel
    • Money
    • Entertainment
    • TV Listings
    • Florida Vintage
    • Events Calendar
    • Concerts
    • Contests & Rules
    • H&I TV
    • MeTV
    • Español
    • Newsletters
    • Contact Us
    • Meet the Team
    • Jobs at WPLG
    • Advertise with us
  • News
  • Weather
  • Sports
  • Features
  • Entertainment
  • Español
  • Newsletters
  • Contact Us
Local10.com
  • News
  • Weather
  • Sports
  • Features
  • Entertainment
  • Español
  • Newsletters
  • Contact Us

WEATHER ALERT

A rip current statement in effect for Coastal Broward and Coastal Miami Dade Regions

EDWARD SNOWDEN


No description available

Gabbard decries Britain's reported demand for Apple to provide backdoor access to users' cloud data

Read full article: Gabbard decries Britain's reported demand for Apple to provide backdoor access to users' cloud data

Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard says she has serious concerns about the British government’s reported demand that Apple provide backdoor access to any data stored in the cloud.

No description available

The Latest: Federal workers face mass layoffs

Read full article: The Latest: Federal workers face mass layoffs

Federal workers all over the country have responded with anger and confusion Friday toward President Donald Trump's aggressive effort to shrink the size of the federal workforce.

No description available

McConnell tests the strengths and limits of his power opposing a trio of Trump's Cabinet nominees

Read full article: McConnell tests the strengths and limits of his power opposing a trio of Trump's Cabinet nominees

No longer in charge, Sen. Mitch McConnell has been speaking his mind.

No description available

Senate confirms Gabbard as Trump's director of national intelligence after Republicans fall in line

Read full article: Senate confirms Gabbard as Trump's director of national intelligence after Republicans fall in line

The Senate has confirmed Tulsi Gabbard as President Donald Trump’s director of national intelligence.

No description available

Tulsi Gabbard, Trump's pick to oversee US spy agencies, advances to Senate confirmation vote

Read full article: Tulsi Gabbard, Trump's pick to oversee US spy agencies, advances to Senate confirmation vote

Tulsi Gabbard, President Donald Trump’s pick to be director of national intelligence, is another step closer to Senate confirmation.

No description available

How Republican skeptics in the Senate got to 'yes' on RFK Jr. and Gabbard

Read full article: How Republican skeptics in the Senate got to 'yes' on RFK Jr. and Gabbard

Republican skepticism in the Senate of President Donald Trump’s Cabinet nominees has been worn down.

No description available

Tulsi Gabbard, Trump's pick to oversee US spy agencies, clears Senate committee

Read full article: Tulsi Gabbard, Trump's pick to oversee US spy agencies, clears Senate committee

Tulsi Gabbard, President Donald Trump's pick to be director of national intelligence, has moved a step closer to Senate confirmation.

No description available

Conspiracies, espionage, an enemies list: Takeaways from a wild day of confirmation hearings

Read full article: Conspiracies, espionage, an enemies list: Takeaways from a wild day of confirmation hearings

President Donald Trump’s most controversial Cabinet nominees have flooded the zone Thursday in back-to-back-to-back confirmation hearings.

No description available

Tulsi Gabbard, Trump's pick to oversee US spy agencies, grilled about Snowden, Syria and Russia

Read full article: Tulsi Gabbard, Trump's pick to oversee US spy agencies, grilled about Snowden, Syria and Russia

Tulsi Gabbard, President Donald Trump's pick to be director of national intelligence, has faced tough questions from lawmakers during a fiery confirmation hearing Thursday.

No description available

Tulsi Gabbard's views on Russia, Syria, Trump and government surveillance — in her own words

Read full article: Tulsi Gabbard's views on Russia, Syria, Trump and government surveillance — in her own words

Tulsi Gabbard faced tough questions Thursday about past comments about Russia, Syria and government leaker Edward Snowden during a Senate confirmation hearing on her nomination to lead the U.S. intelligence service.

No description available

Microsoft lets cloud users keep personal data within Europe to ease privacy fears

Read full article: Microsoft lets cloud users keep personal data within Europe to ease privacy fears

Microsoft says it is upgrading its cloud computing service to let customers store all personal data within the European Union instead of having it flow to the U.S. where national privacy laws don’t exist.

No description available

Like Daniel Ellsberg, others who leaked US government secrets have been seen as traitors and heroes

Read full article: Like Daniel Ellsberg, others who leaked US government secrets have been seen as traitors and heroes

Daniel Ellsberg’s decision to leak the Pentagon Papers made him an instant hero to opponents and a traitor in the eyes of the White House.

No description available

Vietnam-era whistleblower Daniel Ellsberg, who leaked Pentagon Papers, dies at 92

Read full article: Vietnam-era whistleblower Daniel Ellsberg, who leaked Pentagon Papers, dies at 92

Daniel Ellsberg, the government analyst and whistleblower who leaked the Pentagon Papers in 1971, has died at 92.

No description available

Meta fined record $1.3 billion and ordered to stop sending European user data to US

Read full article: Meta fined record $1.3 billion and ordered to stop sending European user data to US

The European Union has slapped Meta with a record $1.3 billion privacy fine and ordered it to stop transferring users' personal information to the United States by October.

No description available

Nan Goldin is going to the Oscars, and she wants to win

Read full article: Nan Goldin is going to the Oscars, and she wants to win

It’s not always emphasized given that she’s one of the most groundbreaking still photographers of the past 50 years.

No description available

Snowden receives Russian passport, takes citizenship oath

Read full article: Snowden receives Russian passport, takes citizenship oath

Russian news agencies say former U.S. intelligence contractor Edward Snowden, who fled prosecution after revealing highly classified surveillance programs, has received a Russian passport and taken the citizenship oath.

No description available

Biden order promises EU citizens better data privacy

Read full article: Biden order promises EU citizens better data privacy

President Joe Biden has signed an executive order designed to allay European concerns that U.S. intelligence agencies are illegally spying on them.

No description available

US candidate to lead UN telecoms agency after US-Russia race

Read full article: US candidate to lead UN telecoms agency after US-Russia race

Doreen Bogdan-Martin of the United States has been elected to head the U.N.’s telecommunications agency.

No description available

EXPLAINER: The intel review of documents at Trump's estate

Read full article: EXPLAINER: The intel review of documents at Trump's estate

The discovery of hundreds of classified records at Donald Trump’s Florida home has thrust U.S. intelligence agencies into a familiar and uncomfortable role.

No description available

Laura Poitras film spotlights activist photographer Goldin

Read full article: Laura Poitras film spotlights activist photographer Goldin

Laura Poitras' Nan Goldin documentary "All the Beauty and the Bloodshed,” is having its world premiere at the Venice Film Festival on Saturday, where it is part of the main competition slate.

No description available

German militants' lawyer and Greens gadfly dies at 83

Read full article: German militants' lawyer and Greens gadfly dies at 83

German lawyer Hans-Christian Stroebele has died at age 83.

No description available

Spy agencies' focus on China could snare Chinese Americans

Read full article: Spy agencies' focus on China could snare Chinese Americans

China is the foremost challenge for U.S. national security agencies, a so-called “hard target” that is America’s chief rival for global dominance.

No description available

US, EU sign data transfer deal to ease privacy concerns

Read full article: US, EU sign data transfer deal to ease privacy concerns

The European Union and United States made a breakthrough in their yearslong battle over the privacy of data that flows across the Atlantic with a preliminary agreement that paves the way for Europeans’ personal information to be stored in the U.S. President Joe Biden and European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen announced the deal Friday during Biden’s stop in Brussels while on a European tour amid Russia’s war in Ukraine.

No description available

Senators: CIA has secret program that collects American data

Read full article: Senators: CIA has secret program that collects American data

Two Democrats on the Senate Intelligence Committee say the CIA has a secret, undisclosed data repository that includes information collected about Americans.

No description available

Court rejects lawsuit against NSA on "state secrets" grounds

Read full article: Court rejects lawsuit against NSA on "state secrets" grounds

A divided federal appeals court has upheld the dismissal of an ACLU lawsuit challenging a portion of the National Security Agency’s warrantless surveillance of Americans’ international email and phone communications.

No description available

Probe: Journalists, activists among firm's spyware targets

Read full article: Probe: Journalists, activists among firm's spyware targets

An investigation by a global media consortium alleges that military-grade malware from Israel-based NSO Group is being used to spy on journalists, human rights activists and political dissidents.

No description available

NSA to NSO: NY filmmakers explore circles of surveillance

Read full article: NSA to NSO: NY filmmakers explore circles of surveillance

American filmmaker Laura Poitras has once again turned her camera on the watchmen in an exhibition opening Friday in Berlin.

No description available

Biden, unlike predecessors, has maintained Putin skepticism

Read full article: Biden, unlike predecessors, has maintained Putin skepticism

President Joe Biden frequently talks about what he sees as central in executing effective foreign policy: building personal relationships.

No description available

Global war on ransomware? Hurdles hinder the US response

Read full article: Global war on ransomware? Hurdles hinder the US response

Foreign keyboard criminals with scant fear of repercussions have paralyzed U.S. schools and hospitals, leaked highly sensitive police files, triggered fuel shortages and, most recently, threatened global food supply chains.

No description available

Belarus leader seeks Russian support amid showdown with EU

Read full article: Belarus leader seeks Russian support amid showdown with EU

Russia’s President Vladimir Putin has met in Sochi with his Belarusian counterpart for talks on forging closer ties amid Minsk's bruising showdown with the European Union over the forced diversion of a passenger jet to arrest a dissident journalist.

No description available

Facebook loses court fight over halting EU-US data transfers

Read full article: Facebook loses court fight over halting EU-US data transfers

Facebook has lost a legal battle with Ireland’s data privacy watchdog over a European Union privacy decision that could result in the social network being forced to stop transferring data to the U.S. The Irish High Court on Friday rejected Facebook’s bid to block a draft decision by the country’s Data Protection Commission to inquire into, and order the suspension of, the company’s data flows between the European Union and the U.S. The Irish watchdog had launched its inquiry last year...

No description available

Steep drop in national security surveillance during pandemic

Read full article: Steep drop in national security surveillance during pandemic

The number of targets of secretive surveillance in national security investigations fell sharply last year in large part because of the coronavirus pandemic.

No description available

Oscar-nominated Romanian film reveals health care failings

Read full article: Oscar-nominated Romanian film reveals health care failings

The Romanian documentary film “Collective” is nominated for two Oscars.

No description available

Despite hacks, US not seeking widened domestic surveillance

Read full article: Despite hacks, US not seeking widened domestic surveillance

The Biden administration is not planning to step up government surveillance of the U.S. internet even as state-backed foreign hackers and cybercriminals increasingly use it to evade detection, a senior administration official said Friday. The official said the administration, mindful of the privacy and civil liberties implications that could arise, is not currently seeking additional authority to monitor U.S.-based networks. AdForeign state hackers are increasingly using U.S.-based virtual private networks, or VPNs, to evade detection by U.S. intelligence agencies, who are legally constrained from monitoring domestic infrastructure. Criminal and state-backed hackers seeking to exploit the underlying flaw are apt to cause more havoc, the administration says. When it comes to the pursuit of new surveillance or monitoring authorities, the official described the administration’s posture as “not yet, not now."

No description available

Snowden and his wife seek to be Russian-US dual nationals

Read full article: Snowden and his wife seek to be Russian-US dual nationals

MOSCOW – Former U.S. security contractor Edward Snowden said Monday that he and his wife intend to apply for Russian citizenship without renouncing their U.S. citizenship. According to Snowden's lawyer, Anatoly Kucherena, the child, a boy, will be born in December and will have Russian citizenship. That’s why, in this era of pandemics and closed borders, we’re applying for dual U.S.-Russian citizenship,” Snowden said in a tweet Monday. Kucherena told the Interfax news agency that the process of preparing the necessary paperwork for getting Snowden a Russian passport will start soon. Previously the law required foreigners to renounce other nationalities in order to get Russian citizenship.

No description available

Facebook may have to stop moving EU user data to US

Read full article: Facebook may have to stop moving EU user data to US

LONDON Facebook may be forced to stop sending data about its European users to the U.S., in the first major fallout from a recent court ruling that found some trans-Atlantic data transfers don't protect users from American government snooping. The social network said Wednesday that Ireland's Data Protection Commission has started an inquiry into how Facebook shifts data from the European Union to the United States. The news was first reported by the Wall Street Journal, which said Irelands data commission gave Facebook until mid-September to respond to a preliminary order to suspend the transfers. The Irish data commission suggested that a type of legal mechanism governing the data transfers, known as standard contractual clauses, cannot in practice be used for EU-U.S. data transfers," Clegg said. But in cases where there are concerns about data privacy, EU regulators should vet, and if needed block, the transfer of data.

No description available

Ex-FBI agent: Attacks from Trump 'outrageous' and 'cruel'

Read full article: Ex-FBI agent: Attacks from Trump 'outrageous' and 'cruel'

Strzok, a former FBI agent who was fired because of derogatory text messages about Donald Trump, writes in a new book that he believes the president has been compromised by Russia. Strzok, for his part, expresses measured regret for the texts in Compromised: Counterintelligence and the Threat of Donald J. Trump, due out Tuesday. Special counsel Robert Mueller's investigation revealed significant contacts between the Trump campaign and Russia but found insufficient evidence of a criminal conspiracy. By his own count, Strzok says, Trump has attacked him since then more than 100 times in tweets. After Trump accused Strzok of treason, he appealed to the FBI for a statement condemning the remarks, but got none.

No description available

Bolton critique of Trump could define tell-all book battles

Read full article: Bolton critique of Trump could define tell-all book battles

Trump on Thursday called the book a compilation of lies and made up stories intended to make him look bad. But he never got a formal clearance letter, and the Trump administration contends that the book, titled The Room Where It Happened: A White House Memoir," still contains sensitive material. Ellis began his review of the Bolton book on May 2 at the behest of national security adviser Robert OBrien. It was initially cleared for publication by Army reviewers, but when spy agency reviewers took a look, they claimed it included classified information that could damage national security. Aftergood, the classifications expert, said the Bolton case has turned the governments little-known prepublication review process into national news.

No description available

CIA unit that crafts hacking tools didn't protect itself

Read full article: CIA unit that crafts hacking tools didn't protect itself

Sen. Ron Wyden, D-Ore., a senior member of the Senate Intelligence Committee, obtained the redacted report from the Justice Department after it was introduced as evidence in a court case this year involving stolen CIA hacking tools. The 2017 report was produced one year after the theft of sensitive tools for hacking into adversaries' networks that were developed by the CIA's specialized Center for Cyber Intelligence. The disclosure of the hacking tools featured prominently in the trial this year of Joshua Schulte, a former CIA software engineer accused of stealing a large trove of the agencys hacking tools and handing it to WikiLeaks. He was convicted in March of only minor charges after a jury deadlocked on more serious espionage counts against him, including the theft of the hacking tools. The CIAs cyber tools were gone in an instant.

BACK TO TOP
  • TV Listings

  • Email Newsletters

  • RSS Feeds

  • Closed Captioning / Audio Description

  • Contact Us

  • Careers at WPLG

  • Terms of Use

  • Privacy Policy

  • Public File

  • FCC Applications

  • EEO Report

  • Do Not Sell My Info

  • 1.0 Host Exhibit

Follow Us
Visit our YouTube page (opens in a new tab)
Visit our Facebook page (opens in a new tab)
Visit our Instagram page (opens in a new tab)
Visit our X page (opens in a new tab)
Visit our RSS Feed page (opens in a new tab)

If you need help with the Public File, call (954) 364-2526


Graham Media Group Logo

Copyright © 2025 Local10.com is published by WPLG INC., a Berkshire Hathaway company.