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The Israel-Hamas War Is Drowning X in Disinformation

By David Gilbert
People who have turned to X for breaking news about the Israel-Hamas conflict are being hit with old videos, fake photos, and video game footage at a level researchers have never seen.

Israel's Failure to Stop the Hamas Attack Shows the Danger of Too Much Surveillance

By Matt Burgess, Lily Hay Newman
Hundreds dead, thousands wounded—Hamas’ surprise attack on Israel shows the limits of even the most advanced and invasive surveillance dragnets as full-scale war erupts.

White Supremacist Active Clubs Are Breeding on Telegram

By David Gilbert
A “friendlier” front for racist extremism has spread rapidly across the US in recent months, as active club channels network on Telegram's encrypted messaging app.

Chinese Hackers Are Hiding in Routers in the US and Japan

By Lily Hay Newman, Matt Burgess
Plus: Stolen US State Department emails, $20 million zero-day flaws, and controversy over the EU’s message-scanning law.

US Justice Department Urged to Investigate Gunshot Detector Purchases

By Dell Cameron, Dhruv Mehrotra
A civil liberties group has asked the DOJ to investigate deployment of the ShotSpotter gunfire-detection system, which research shows is often installed in predominantly Black neighborhoods.

Risk of a US Government Shutdown Is Fueled by Very Online Republicans

By Matt Laslo
Egged on by a far-reaching conservative media ecosystem, right-wing hardliners are forcing Washington to bend to their reality as the federal government careens toward a possible shutdown.

The Shocking Data on Kia and Hyundai Thefts in the US

By Lily Hay Newman
Plus: MGM hackers hit more than just casinos, Microsoft researchers accidentally leak terabytes of data, and China goes on the PR offensive over cyberespionage.

The US Congress Has Trust Issues. Generative AI Is Making It Worse

By Matt Laslo
Senators are meeting with Silicon Valley's elite to learn how to deal with AI. But can Congress tackle the rapidly emerging tech before working on itself?

China-Linked Hackers Breached a Power Grid—Again

By Andy Greenberg
Signs suggest the culprits worked within a notorious Chinese hacker group that may have also hacked Indian electric utilities years earlier.

Mozilla: Your New Car Is a Data Privacy Nightmare

By Dhruv Mehrotra, Andrew Couts
Plus: Apple patches newly discovered flaws exploited by NSO Group spyware, North Korean hackers target security researchers, and more.

Top US Spies Meet With Privacy Experts Over Surveillance 'Crown Jewel'

By Dell Cameron
Civil rights groups say efforts to get US intelligence agencies to adopt privacy reforms have largely failed. Without those changes, renewal of a post-911 surveillance policy may be doomed.

Axon's Ethics Board Resigned Over Taser-Armed Drones. Then the Company Bought a Military Drone Maker

By Ese Olumhense
The CEO’s vision for Taser-equipped drones includes a fictitious scenario in which the technology averts a shooting at a day care center.

US and UK Mount Aggressive Crackdown on Trickbot and Conti Ransomware Gangs

By Lily Hay Newman
Authorities have sanctioned 11 alleged members of the cybercriminal groups, while the US Justice Department unsealed three federal indictments against nine people accused of being members.

The International Criminal Court Will Now Prosecute Cyberwar Crimes

By Andy Greenberg
And the first case on the docket may well be Russia’s cyberattacks against civilian critical infrastructure in Ukraine.

How China Demands Tech Firms Reveal Hackable Flaws in Their Products

By Andy Greenberg
Some foreign companies may be complying—potentially offering China’s spies hints for hacking their customers.

The Strange Afterlife of Wagner’s Yevgeny Prigozhin

By Matt Burgess
Posts praising the Wagner Group boss following his death in a mysterious plane crash last month indicate he was still in control of his "troll farm," researchers claim.

2 Polish Men Arrested for Radio Hack That Disrupted Trains

By Andy Greenberg, Andrew Couts
Plus: A major FBI botnet takedown, new Sandworm malware, a cyberattack on two major scientific telescopes—and more.

The Cheap Radio Hack That Disrupted Poland's Railway System

By Andy Greenberg
The sabotage of more than 20 trains in Poland by apparent supporters of Russia was carried out with a simple “radio-stop” command anyone could broadcast with $30 in equipment.

The Low-Stakes Race to Crack an Encrypted German U-Boat Message

By Cathy Alter
A ramshackle team of American scientists scrambled to decode the Nazi cipher before the time ran out. Luckily, they had a secret weapon.

This Tool Lets Hackers Dox Almost Anyone in the US

By Dhruv Mehrotra
The US Secret Service’s relationship with the Oath Keepers gets revealed, Tornado Cash cofounders get indicted, and a UK court says a teen is behind a Lapsus$ hacking spree.

Donald Trump's Mug Shot Matters in a World of Fakes

By Amanda Hoover
The first booking photo of a US president stands out among a sea of photoshops and AI-generated images online.

Trump’s Prosecution Is America’s Last Hope

By Dell Cameron, Andrew Couts
Social norms—not laws—are the underlying fabric of democracy. The Georgia indictment against Donald Trump is the last tool remaining to repair that which he’s torn apart.

The Last Hour Before Yevgeny Prigozhin's Plane Crash

By Matt Burgess
Russia tightly controls its information space—making it hard to get accurate information out of the country. But open source data provides some clues about the crash.

The Most Popular Digital Abortion Clinics, Ranked by Data Privacy

By Kristen Poli
Telehealth companies that provide abortion pills are surging in popularity. Which are as safe as they claim to be?

How X Is Suing Its Way Out of Accountability

By Vittoria Elliott
The social media giant filed a lawsuit against a nonprofit that researches hate speech online. It’s the latest effort to cut off the data needed to expose online platforms’ failings.

The Mystery of Chernobyl’s Post-Invasion Radiation Spikes

By Kim Zetter
Soon after Russian troops invaded Ukraine in February 2022, sensors in the Chernobyl Exclusion Zone reported radiation spikes. A researcher now believes he’s found evidence the data was manipulated.

The Senate’s AI Future Is Haunted by the Ghost of Privacy Past

By Matt Laslo
The US Congress is trying to tame the rapid rise of artificial intelligence. But senators’ failure to tackle privacy reform is making the task a nightmare.

How AI May Be Used to Create Custom Disinformation Ahead of 2024

By Thor Benson
Generative AI won't just flood the internet with more lies—it may also create convincing disinformation that's targeted at groups or even individuals.

The NSA Is Lobbying Congress to Save a Phone Surveillance 'Loophole'

By Dell Cameron
The National Security Agency has urged top lawmakers to resist demands that it obtain warrants for sensitive data sold by data brokers.

China’s Breach of Microsoft Cloud Email May Expose Deeper Problems

By Matt Burgess, Lily Hay Newman
Plus: Microsoft expands access to premium security features, AI child sexual abuse material is on the rise, and Netflix’s password crackdown has its intended effect.

NYPD Body Cam Data Shows the Scale of Violence Against Protesters

By Dhruv Mehrotra, Andrew Couts
A landmark $13 million settlement with the City of New York is the latest in a string of legal wins for protesters who were helped by a video-analysis tool that smashes the “bad apple” myth.

Satellites Are Rife With Basic Security Flaws

By Matt Burgess
German researchers gained rare access to three satellites and found that they're years behind normal cybersecurity standards.

Fourth Amendment Is Not for Sale Act Goes Back to Congress

By Dell Cameron
A bill to prevent cops and spies from buying Americans’ data instead of getting a warrant has a fighting chance in the US Congress as lawmakers team up against surveillance overreach.

FBI Surveillance Fears Are Uniting a Badly Broken Congress

By Dell Cameron
The FBI has collected sensitive data on millions of Americans without warrants, drawing intense scrutiny from Congress and turning the agency into a punching bag across the political divide.

US Spies Are Buying Americans' Private Data. Congress Has a Chance to Stop It

By Dell Cameron
The National Defense Authorization Act may include new language forbidding government entities from buying Americans' search histories, location data, and more.

US Supreme Court Hands Cyberstalkers a First Amendment Victory

By Lily Hay Newman
Plus: Hackers knock out Russian military satellite communications, a spyware maker gets breached, and the SEC targets a victim company's CISO.

The Night 17 Million Precious Military Records Went Up in Smoke

By Megan Greenwell
Fifty years ago, a fire ripped through the National Personnel Records Center. It set off a massive project to save crucial pieces of American history—including, I hoped, my grandfather’s.

Update Your iPhone Right Now to Fix 2 Apple Zero Days

By Dhruv Mehrotra, Andrew Couts
Plus: Discord has a child predator problem, fears rise of China spying from Cuba, and hackers try to blackmail Reddit.

Docs Show FBI Pressures Cops to Keep Phone Surveillance Secrets

By Dell Cameron
Newly released documents highlight the bureau's continued secrecy around cell-site simulators—spying tech that everyone already assumes exists.

Humans Aren’t Mentally Ready for an AI-Saturated ‘Post-Truth World’

By Thor Benson
The AI era promises a flood of disinformation, deepfakes, and hallucinated “facts.” Psychologists are only beginning to grapple with the implications.

A Newly Named Group of GRU Hackers is Wreaking Havoc in Ukraine

By Andy Greenberg, Andrew Couts
Plus: The arrest of an alleged Lockbit ransomware hacker, the wild tale of a problematic FBI informant, and one of North Korea’s biggest crypto heists.

Clop Hacking Rampage Hits US Agencies and Exposes Data of Millions

By Lily Hay Newman
The ransomware gang Clop exploited a vulnerability in a file transfer service. The flaw is now patched, but the damage is still coming into focus.

The US Navy, NATO, and NASA Are Using a Shady Chinese Company’s Encryption Chips

By Andy Greenberg
The US government warns encryption chipmaker Hualan has suspicious ties to China’s military. Yet US agencies still use one of its subsidiary’s chips, raising fears of a backdoor.

UFO Whistleblower, Meet a Conspiracy-Loving Congress

By Matt Laslo
Fresh claims from a former US intelligence officer about an “intact” alien craft may get traction on Capitol Hill, where some lawmakers want to believe.

The Bold Plan to Create Cyber 311 Hotlines

By Eric Geller
UT-Austin will join a growing movement to launch cybersecurity clinics for cities and small businesses that often fall through the cracks.

Hacks Against Ukraine's Emergency Response Services Rise During Bombings

By Lily Hay Newman
Data from Cloudflare's free digital defense service, Project Galileo, illuminates new links between online and offline attacks.

Inside 4chan’s Top-Secret Moderation Machine

By Justin Ling
Internal company documents reveal how the imageboard’s chaotic moderation allowed racism and violence to take over.

The Messy US Influence That’s Helping Iranians Stay Online

By Lily Hay Newman
Newly announced sanctions against Iran-based Avaran Cloud underscore the complexity of crafting Washington’s internet freedom efforts.

Kaspersky Says New Zero-Day Malware Hit iPhones—Including Its Own

By Lily Hay Newman, Andy Greenberg
On the same day, Russia’s FSB intelligence service launched wild claims of NSA and Apple hacking thousands of Russians.

China Hacks US Critical Networks in Guam, Raising Cyberwar Fears

By Andy Greenberg, Lily Hay Newman
Researchers say the state-sponsored espionage operation may also lay the groundwork for disruptive cyberattacks.

A TikTok ‘Car Theft’ Challenge Is Costing Hyundai $200 Million

By Andrew Couts
Plus: The FBI gets busted abusing a spy tool, an ex-Apple engineer is charged with corporate espionage, and collection of airborne DNA raises new privacy risks.

The Underground History of Turla, Russia's Most Ingenious Hacker Group

By Andy Greenberg
From USB worms to satellite-based hacking, Russia’s FSB hackers, known as Turla, have spent 25 years distinguishing themselves as “adversary number one.”

How You, or Anyone, Can Dodge Montana’s TikTok Ban

By Amanda Hoover
Montana’s TikTok ban will be impossible to enforce. But it could encourage copycat crackdowns against the social media app.

A Mysterious Group Has Ties to 15 Years of Ukraine-Russia Hacks

By Lily Hay Newman
Kaspersky researchers have uncovered clues that further illuminate the hackers’ activities, which appear to have begun far earlier than originally believed.

Buffalo Mass Shooting Victims' Families Sue Meta, Reddit, Amazon

By Justin Ling
The families of victims of a mass shooting in Buffalo are challenging the platforms they believe led the attacker to carry out a racist massacre.

Toyota Leaked Vehicle Data of 2 Million Customers

By Dhruv Mehrotra, Andrew Couts
The FBI disables notorious Russia-linked malware, the EU edges toward a facial recognition ban, and security firm Dragos has an intrusion of its own.

A Republican-Led Lawsuit Threatens Critical US Cyber Protections

By Eric Geller
Three states are suing to block security rules for water facilities. If they win, it may open the floodgates for challenges to other cyber rules.

A Mysterious New Hacker Group, Red Stinger, Is Lurking in Ukraine’s Cyberspace

By Lily Hay Newman
The unidentified attackers have targeted people on both sides of Russia’s war against Ukraine, carrying out espionage operations that suggest state funding.
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