Wired published a Record -based investigations, including audio recording of hundreds of emergency calls from the United States immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) detention centers. These calls include reports of staff sexual assaults, suicide efforts, and head injuries.
In a 6-3 verdict on Friday, the US Supreme Court upheld the Texas pornographic identity law, which revealed that the verification of clear places is constitutional. In disagreement, Justice Elena Kagan warned that this commitment ignores the theory of the first amendment and will have privacy implications for adults.
Seeing the US bombing at Iranian nuclear places last weekend, President Donald Trump published preliminary announcements of attacks on social networks social social social attacks, after which intermittent closures. And the wired reported about the damage to nuclear sites based on the satellite images taken before and after the bombing.
Meanwhile, Taiwan is roaming its unmanned air vehicles to make it domestic as drones become an important weapon of war. Hurry emerges as a potential dispute with China. And Telegram launched a clean launch of Chinese cryptocurrency markets last month, which banned black markets, which sold tens of billions of dollars in crypto scheme services. However, now, markets are re -branding and bouncing without further action from the communication platform.
But stop, even more! Every week, we prepare for security and privacy news that we did not cover the depth. Click headlines to read full stories. And be safe there.
The Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) is now using a mobile app called Mobile Fortefi, which allegedly allows agents to identify individuals by identifying a smartphone on their face or seizing contactless fingerprints. The app is reportedly tapped in the official database, which includes traveling of customs and border protection traveler verification services and DHS biometric intelligence systems, trying to compete with facial images taken in the field against the first records before the government. The ICE says the tool aims to help officers identify “unknown articles”, but 404 supporters of civil liberties tell the media that it can open the door for surveillance profiles and wrong arrests.
ACLU’s Nathan Fred Weasler told the site, “Facial identification technology is notorious, which often produces wrong matches and results in many known wrong arrests across the country. Immigration agents have tried to rely on this technology.” The Congress has not authorized the DHS in this way to use facial identity technology, and the agency should never use identity technology along the way, and this agency should also use identity technology along this way, and this agency should also use the technology of such identification, and also use it.
World law enforcement agencies this week has announced the breakup of a group of alleged cybercriminals hackers, alleging that they are conducting years of profit violations of the year, and announces the notorious cybercriminal forum and market, known as the Breach Forum. French authorities arrested four members of the group called “Shen Hunters,” “hollow,” “nook,” and “depressed”, though police sources, who have shared the news with the French newspaper Le Perin, did not disclose the real names of the suspects. Meanwhile, the US Department of Justice accused a young British man, Kai West, offered a wide, year long hacking under the handle “Intel Broker”, which suffered a loss of $ 25 million against the victims before being arrested in February. In addition to widely hacking and selling stolen data, this group – or at least some of its members – has presented to serve as organizers of Breach Forums, an infamous sales forum for cyber criminal information and tools, which was closed in 2023, but later in 2023.
The loose cyber criminal gang, known as the scattered spider, has carried out data theft and renampeare for years, recently targeted the grocery industry, other retailers and insurance industry in the United States and the UK. Now the group is drawing its attention to the aviation and transport sector, says CyberScript analysts from the Mandent and Palo Alto Networks. In particular, the hackers were behind a cyberselfi incident last week that eliminated some IT system and mobile app for Canadian airline West Jet, according to Axisos. Now Hawaii Airlines has said that it is experiencing the “CyberScript incident” affecting its network, though it has not yet revealed further details or any evidence that the spider is responsible. CyberScript firms have detected the group that other potential aviation and transportation industry goals should be in search of a group, which often uses sophisticated social engineering to ignore staff’s verification of multi -factor and step on the target system.
Here is a curiosity that we exempt a few weeks ago: a rare industrial control system hijacking event in which an unknown hacker shows a mess with a computer system that controls the Lake Ruswetnet Dam in southwestern Norway, which has opened a valve to its maximum setting. The tampering, whose motivation was not clear, increased the dam water flow by about 500 liters in a second, but it did not approach the dangerous level. It seems that anyone has seen this change for about four hours. Officials told Norwegian Energy News Outlet Energykink, which broke the story, that a weak password on a web -controlled panel has allowed unauthorized access to unauthorized access.


