

The police initially believe she slipped in the bathtub, but McCleary begins covering the case, and his reporting reveals it was a murder. Chapman tries to restrain her, accidentally killing her in the scuffle.Ĭhapman attempts to cover up his crime, posing the scene to look like an accident. When Chapman rebuffs her efforts toward reconciliation, she threatens to publicize his real identity.

It is revealed that Chapman's real name is George Grant, and he abandoned his wife decades earlier, changing his identity. One night, during a lonely hearts dance organized by the Express, Chapman's estranged wife ( Rosemary De Camp) confronts him and demands he visit her hotel room. His protégé is ace reporter Steve McCleary ( John Derek), while successful feature writer Julie Allison ( Donna Reed) is frustrated by the paper's drift towards raking the muck. Mark Chapman ( Broderick Crawford), editor of the New York Express, has made the newspaper a success by pursuing sensationalism and yellow journalism. The drama features Broderick Crawford, Donna Reed and John Derek. The film is based on the novel The Dark Page by Samuel Fuller, who himself was a newspaper reporter before his career in film. Photo from Wikimedia, shared under a Creative Commons license.Scandal Sheet is a 1952 American film noir directed by Phil Karlson. The opinions expressed herein are solely those of the author.
#KARLSON HACKS FULL#
Read the full article at Foreign Affairs. officials should encourage the public to help the Ukrainian defense in ways that cannot be used as a pretext for retaliation."
#KARLSON HACKS UPDATE#
It must also revise and update its neutrality laws to account for these new forms of informal cyberconflict, to be able to hold hackers fighting from U.S. "A retaliatory Russian cyberattack targeting the United States could devastate critical infrastructure, the private sector, and civilians who have played no part in the conflict. Washington must make clear that hacking Russia from U.S.Despite the West’s military contributions to the Ukrainian defense, as well as some states." "In the absence of any official authority over volunteer hackers, state governments should brace themselves for a rise in cyber-accidents, cyberattacks, and potential escalation - and most importantly, they should attempt to regulate freelance shadow wars.

"Another crucial difference sets these novel volunteers apart from soldiers in the employ of armed forces: they are not obliged to follow the Geneva Conventions, nor do they seem familiar with them or with national laws that, for example, ban citizen cyber-intrusions, even against foreign countries.".That, in turn, could trigger further escalation." "Moscow would not retaliate against the attackers - who might be a few different individuals dispersed around the world-but against Ukraine or against the attackers’ countries of origin or residence.could do completely unhelpful things like attacking the wrong targets,' said Karlson." In the absence of any guidance or direction, 'the volunteers. "The lack of a command-and-control system - or any commanding authority, in fact - poses enormous risks.'But just as volunteer soldiers from within Ukraine or from abroad who don’t know what they’re doing and aren’t operating in a proper structure can sometimes do more harm than good, so can volunteer hackers.'” “'No reasonable person will want to condemn volunteers for trying to help Ukraine,' Ciaran Martin, the founding director of Britain’s National Cyber Security Centre, told me.But there are serious risks involved in waging an informal cyberbattle against Russia, particularly since cyberwarfare may be one of the few remaining tools in the Kremlin’s playbook." "Ukrainian authorities estimate that some 400,000 hackers from numerous countries have aided the country’s digital fight so far. .The author, a senior fellow at the American Enterprise Institute, writes:
