Gallery: You Can't Understand Security Without These Classic Works
MGM/Everett Collection01WARGAMES, Matthew Broderick, Ally Sheedy, 1983, (c) MGM/courtesy Everett Collection
[*WarGames*](https://youtu.be/hbqMuvnx5MU) | A high-schooler hacks into a US military computer and brings the country to the brink of war—a reminder that attribution can be tricky.
02secrets-of-the-little-blue-box
[“Secrets of the Little Blue Box”](http://www.historyofphonephreaking.org/docs/rosenbaum1971.pdf) | Ron Rosenbaum’s 1971 *Esquire* story introduced phone phreaking to the world and inspired Jobs and Woz to start their first business.
Laura Poitras03citizen-four
[*Citizenfour*](https://youtu.be/rHaWhUjV96M) | Snowden defined how we now think about government surveillance; Laura Poitras’ documentary defined how we think about Snowden himself.
04the-cyphernomicon
[*The Cyphernomicon*](https://www.cypherpunks.to/faq/cyphernomicron/cyphernomicon.html) | Timothy May published this mind-bogglingly prescient outline for a crypto-anarchic revolution on the Cypherpunks mailing list in 1994.
Touchstone Pictures05enemy-of-the-state
[*Enemy of the State*](https://youtu.be/MJQ30fPYec8) | More than a decade before Edward Snowden exposed the extent of the NSA’s domestic spying, this 1998 film warned of the dangers of giving the agency unfettered powers.
06Moral Politics
*[Moral Politics](http://amzn.com/0226467716): How Liberals and Conservatives Think* | George Lakoff’s assertion that metaphor and the framing of ideas determines personal politics remains hugely influential in modern polling.
TED07mikko
[Mikko Hypponen](https://youtu.be/9CqVYUOjHLw) | Few security professionals possess the public speaking skills necessary to convey supreme technical expertise. Hypponen is that rarity.
08Crypto
[*Crypto*](http://amzn.com/0140244328) | Steven Levy’s “people’s history of cryptography” starts at the advent of public key encryption and traces it through the geek victories in the first Crypto War.
Universal09sneakers
[*Sneakers*](https://youtu.be/rbJpx_6fYgE) | The perfect nerd-caper flick, this 1992 tale of penetration testers caught up in a conflict over secret codebreaking tools still feels relevant today.
10Cryptonomicon
[*Cryptonomicon*](http://amzn.com/0380788624) | Neal Stephenson’s 1999 masterwork is the ultimate cypherpunk epic, flitting between World War II and the late ’90s tech boom.
Ryan Young for WIRED11defcon-4x3
[Def Con](https://www.defcon.org/) | For understanding American hacker culture, four days in Vegas at one of the world’s biggest hacker conferences is like drinking from a fire hose.
12The Cuckoo's Egg
[*The Cuckoo’s Egg*](http://amzn.com/1416507787) | Clifford Stoll’s 1989 thriller recounts his hunt for a KGB cyberspy after a 75-cent accounting discrepancy revealed a breach into Lawrence Berkeley National Lab computers.
Paramount13three-days-of-the-condor
[*Three Days of the Condor*](https://youtu.be/vRn4A39QHKY) | Sydney Pollack’s 1975 political thriller stars Robert Redford as a nerdy CIA researcher who returns from lunch to find all his colleagues dead.
14The Puzzle Palace
[*The Puzzle Palace*](http://amzn.com/0140067485) | WIRED contributor James Bamford’s seminal 1982 book exposed how the NSA operated internally and how it spied on Americans after WWII.
US Special Forces Soldier Arrested for Polymarket Bets on Maduro Raid
The master sergeant allegedly used classified intel to profit on the capture of Venezuelan president Nicolás Maduro, marking the first US arrest for insider trading on a prediction market.
Kate Knibbs
Newly Deciphered Sabotage Malware May Have Targeted Iran’s Nuclear Program—and Predates Stuxnet
Researchers have finally cracked Fast16, mysterious code capable of silently tampering with calculation and simulation software. It was created in 2005—and likely deployed by the US or an ally.
Andy Greenberg
Rednote Draws a Line Between China and the World
As the platform expands abroad, it’s taking steps to separate Chinese users from the international audiences it once brought together.
Zeyi Yang
Apple’s Next Chapter, SpaceX and Cursor Strike a Deal, and Palantir’s Controversial Manifesto
In this week’s episode of Uncanny Valley, we talk about Tim Cook’s legacy as CEO at Apple and what his long-rumored departure means for the future of one of the world's biggest companies.
Brian Barrett
At 'AI Coachella,' Stanford Students Line Up to Learn From Silicon Valley Royalty
CS 153 has gone viral on the Palo Alto campus—and on X. Not everyone is happy about it.
Maxwell Zeff
Palantir Employees Are Starting to Wonder if They're the Bad Guys
Interviews with current and former Palantir employees, along with internal Slack messages obtained by WIRED, suggest a workforce in turmoil.
Makena Kelly
This Is the Only Office Lamp That Does Double Duty on My Nightstand
Portable lamps are rarely, if ever, as powerful, precise, and multipurpose as the Lume Cube Edge Light Go.
Matthew Korfhage
These New Smart Glasses From Ex-OnePlus Engineers Have a Hidden Cost
The Kickstarter-funded glasses from L'Atitude 52°N have AI features bundled for one year, but the company doesn't know yet how much it will charge for access after that.
Boone Ashworth
The Best Pool-Cleaning Robots for a Truly Automated Summer
Send the pool guy packing. One of these robotic buddies can maintain your water quality instead.
Christopher Null
The Best Fitbit Models for Every Lifestyle
The fitness trackers I'd recommend to beginners, athletes, and kids.
Boutayna Chokrane
Robot Vacuums That Don't Suck (Unless It's Dirt)
Tired of vacuuming? Hand the reins to a robot vacuum.
Nena Farrell
They Made D4vd a Star. Now They Want Him Convicted of Murder
A legion of young fans propelled the singer D4vd to viral fame. Now that he’s been charged with the murder of 14-year-old Celeste Rivas Hernandez, they say the clues were in their Discord all along.
Jennifer Swann