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Security Latest

The FCC Wants to Kill Burner Phones Grok Is Still Hosting Sexualized Deepfakes of Famous Women Drug Sites Hijacked Spotify’s Search Ranking Through Fake Podcasts Signal Alums Reveal ‘Encrypted Spaces,’ a System for Making Private Collaboration Apps CISA Tells US Agencies to Fix Security Bugs in as Little as 3 Days Thanks to AI Threats Trump Risks Key Surveillance Authority Over ‘Unqualified’ Spy-Chief Pick Wrongful Arrest Exposes Failures in One of the Oldest Police Face-Recognition Tools in the US Soccer Fans, You’re Being Watched Mapping Every Flock License Plate Reader Near US World Cup Stadiums Amnesty International Warns That World Cup Fans Face Potential Human Rights Violations Anthropic Offers Mythos Upgrade for Cyber Partners and a ‘Safe’ Version for the Rest of You Meta Deletes Face-Recognition System From Its Smart Glasses App After WIRED Report All the Ways Europe Is Ditching American Technology Meta Silently Added Face-Recognition Code for Its Smart Glasses to Millions of Phones xAI Asks Court to Strip Alleged Grok Deepfake Nudes Victims of Anonymity Android Is Fighting Phone Scams With a New Feature to Prove Who’s Calling The Manhattan Institute Helped Kill DEI. Now It’s Coming for Protests The Romance Scammer Who Made a Small Fortune Posing as a WWE Superstar Websites Can Now Spy on You Through Your Hard Drive Cybercrime Crew Claims It Hacked Mike Lindell’s MyPillow The White House’s Aliens.gov Site Brags That ICE Arrested More Than 700 US Citizens The Pentagon Knew Enemies Could Track Troops’ Phones for Years. Now They Are Scammers Are Using Your Real Hotel Reservations to Trick You With Spear-Phishing Attacks Internet Starts to Return in Iran After 3-Month Blackout US Law Enforcement Warns of ‘Anti-Tech Extremism’ as AI Hatred Grows The AI Era Is Creating a Bug-Hunting Arms Race The FBI Wants ‘Near Real-Time’ Access to US License Plate Readers ‘Creepy’ Listening Tool for Targeted Ads Didn’t Actually Work, FTC Says A Hacker Group Is Poisoning Open Source Code at an Unprecedented Scale The EU Is Going Through a Trump-Fueled Breakup With Big Tech A Bipartisan Amendment Would End Police License Plate Tracking Nationwide Madison Square Garden Bans Lawyer Representing New York Cop Injured at a Boxing Match Data Brokers’ and AI Firms’ Opt-Out Forms Are Built to Fail, Report Finds You Can Get Some of Your Nudes Removed From the Internet Under a New Law An ICE Firearms Trainer Was Involved in At Least 4 Deadly Shootings Cybercriminal Twins Caught After They Forgot to Turn Off Microsoft Teams Recording Your iPhone Gets Stolen. Then the Hacking Begins DHS Plans Experiment Running ‘Reconnaissance’ Drones Along the US-Canada Border WhatsApp Adds Meta AI Chats That Are Built to Be Fully Private Foxconn Ransomware Attack Shows Nothing Is Safe Forever Iran Is Using Tiny ‘Mosquito’ Boats to Shut Down the Strait of Hormuz Hackable Robot Lawn Mower Unlocks a New Nightmare How to Disable Google's Gemini in Chrome Cybercriminals Are Complaining About AI Slop Flooding Their Forums DHS Demanded Google Surrender Data on Canadian’s Activity, Location Over Anti-ICE Posts Disneyland Now Uses Face Recognition on Visitors OpenAI Rolls Out ‘Advanced’ Security Mode for At-Risk Accounts Exposed Data Illustrates the Nightmare Scenario for a Stalkerware Victim The Race Is on to Keep AI Agents From Running Wild With Your Credit Cards California Engineer Identified in Suspected Shooting at White House Correspondents Dinner Discord Sleuths Gained Unauthorized Access to Anthropic’s Mythos Newly Deciphered Sabotage Malware May Have Targeted Iran’s Nuclear Program—and Predates Stuxnet AI Tools Are Helping Mediocre North Korean Hackers Steal Millions Mozilla Used Anthropic’s Mythos to Find and Fix 271 Bugs in Firefox Meta Is Sued Over Scam Ads on Facebook and Instagram They Built a Legendary Privacy Tool. Now They’re Sworn Enemies The Weird, Twisting Tale of How China Spied on Alysa Liu and Her Dad It Takes 2 Minutes to Hack the EU’s New Age-Verification App Republican Mutiny Sinks Trump's Push to Extend Warrantless Surveillance The Shocking Secrets of Madison Square Garden’s Surveillance Machine Europe’s Online Age Verification App Is Here The Deepfake Nudes Crisis in Schools Is Much Worse Than You Thought In the Wake of Anthropic’s Mythos, OpenAI Has a New Cybersecurity Model—and Strategy Telegram Is Still Hosting a Sanctioned $21 Billion Crypto Scammer Black Market The FCC Has a Fast Lane for Complaints About Trump’s Media Critics Meta Is Warned That Facial Recognition Glasses Will Arm Sexual Predators The Dumbest Hack of the Year Exposed a Very Real Problem Your Push Notifications Aren’t Safe From the FBI How the Internet Broke Everyone’s Bullshit Detectors Anthropic’s Mythos Will Force a Cybersecurity Reckoning—Just Not the One You Think Politicians Are Spending More Money on Security as They Increasingly Become Targets ‘We Were Not Ready for This’: Lebanon's Emergency System Is Hanging by a Thread Men Are Buying Hacking Tools to Use Against Their Wives and Friends Iran-Linked Hackers Are Sabotaging US Energy and Water Infrastructure Anthropic Teams Up With Its Rivals to Keep AI From Hacking Everything Border Patrol Agents Sold Challenge Coins With ‘Charlotte’s Web’ Characters in Riot Gear Hackers Are Posting the Claude Code Leak With Bonus Malware Meta Pauses Work With Mercor After Data Breach Puts AI Industry Secrets at Risk CBP Facility Codes Sure Seem to Have Leaked Via Online Flashcards ‘Uncanny Valley’: Iran’s Threats on US Tech, Trump’s Plans for Midterms, and Polymarket’s Pop-up Flop What Happens When a Nuclear Site Is Hit? Unmasking the Paramilitary Agents Behind Trump’s Violent Immigration Crackdown Apple Will Push Out Rare ‘Backported’ Patches to Protect iOS 18 Users From DarkSword Hacking Tool Iran Threatens to Start Attacking Major US Tech Firms on April 1 The US Military’s GPS Software Is an $8 Billion Mess The Broken System That Keeps Shipping Crews Stranded in the Strait of Hormuz Iranian Hackers Breached Kash Patel’s Email—but Not the FBI’s How Trump’s Plot to Grab Iran's Nuclear Fuel Would Actually Work
Crypto-Funded Chinese Peptide Labs Are Booming
Andy Greenberg, Dell Cameron, Dhruv Mehrotra, Maddy Varner · 2026-06-06 · via Security Latest

Meta has been quietly stashing dormant face recognition code on more than 50 million phones, WIRED reported this week, tucked inside the companion app that pairs with its Ray-Ban and Oakley smart glasses. If activated, the feature—known internally as NameTag—would let wearers identify people in front of them by matching captured faces against a biometric gallery sitting on the user’s device. It’s the same kind of technology Meta said it walked away from in 2021, after paying out billions of dollars to settle biometric privacy lawsuits in Texas and Illinois.

Meanwhile, xAI is asking a federal judge to force four people suing the company over Grok-generated deepfake nudes to drop their pseudonyms and litigate under their real names—including one plaintiff who alleges the chatbot was used to fabricate sexual images of her as a child. The plaintiffs say they’d sooner drop the suit than submit to harassment and doxing from Musk’s online supporters. xAI’s lawyers, however, claim that since the deepfakes will remain under seal, there’s “nothing inherently stigmatizing” about naming the people in them.

Google rolled out a new Android feature this week aimed at the wave of AI-powered impersonation scams that help fraudsters spoof a familiar number and clone a person’s voice. Packaged with Google Dialer and shipping to phones running Android 12 or later, it pings the caller’s device for a silent cryptographic handshake. If the call is fake, Android will flag it and strip the contact photo from the screen, but only if both ends are on Google Dialer, which leaves iPhones out of the picture.

WIRED also reported this week that the Manhattan Institute—the same right-wing think tank that engineered the 1990s broken-windows policing and the Trump administration’s anti-DEI push—is now shopping model legislation to turn minor protest-related offenses into felonies under a novel theory it calls “civil terrorism.”

Researchers have detailed a clever new browser side-channel attack called FROST that fingerprints other tabs—and sometimes the apps on your device—by measuring how long it takes to read from a sandboxed file on your SSD. The attack runs entirely in JavaScript and feeds the timing traces through a neural network trained on the I/O signatures of common software. No evidence so far anyone is using it in the wild.

And that’s not all. Each week, we round up the security and privacy news we didn’t cover in-depth ourselves. Click the headlines to read the full stories, and stay safe out there.

Chinese Crypto-Funded Fentanyl Labs Are Switching to Selling Peptides

The supplements known as peptides—chains of amino acids that promise to help those who smear, ingest, or inject them achieve everything from weight loss to skin rejuvenation—have become their own largely unregulated pharmaceutical subindustry. So it figures that their growth is being fueled by cryptocurrency, often sent directly to the Chinese labs that sell these mysterious panaceas.

Crypto-tracing firm Chainalysis this week published an analysis of crypto flows to peptide sellers, a gray market that the company now measures at more than $100 million a year and growing. Chainalysis specifically found that some of the same Chinese labs that were previously selling fentanyl precursors have now switched to manufacturing and selling peptides. The transition, Chainalysis believes, is designed to cash in on the wave of “looksmaxing” hype across social media that has pushed peptide sales—and to avoid the risk of a law enforcement crackdown on opioid manufacturers.

Meta’s AI Support Hacked Its Own Users’ Accounts

AI can do all kinds of things if you just ask it: Code an app, touch up your photos, or even hack President Barack Obama’s Instagram account. Since Meta announced in March that its account support will be increasingly automated with AI, including for functions like updating your password, hackers found that they could exploit the tool to reset the password and take over accounts of even high-profile users and celebrities. Among the victims, as reported by 404 Media, are Obama, the chief master sergeant of the US Space Force, and makeup chain Sephora. Meta says the issue is now fixed and affected accounts have been secured. But the wave of takeovers illustrates the risks of off-loading security functions to AI—particularly at companies like Meta, which has very publicly touted its all-in approach to adopting AI across the company.

Anthropic Is Now Helping the NSA With Offensive Hacking

When AI firm Anthropic rolled out its powerful Mythos tool to a select group of organizations for testing, it raised eyebrows by including the US National Security Agency on that initial access list. Mythos, after all, is reportedly capable of finding previously hidden, hackable vulnerabilities in software with alarming speed, raising fears that it could be used for automated mass surveillance and cyberattacks. But the NSA also has a defensive mission, and initial reporting suggested the agency might just be using Anthropic’s tool to find bugs in popular software used by Americans—such as Microsoft’s—with the goal of better securing it. Yet the Financial Times now reports that Anthropic is helping the NSA take its use of Mythos a step further, deploying Anthropic’s own engineers to the agency to help it learn to use the AI tool—including for offensive hacking. The FT couldn’t confirm that Mythos is being used in active hacking operations. But given the growing use of AI for state-sponsored hacking, it would be a surprise if the US is not joining the field of modern-day automated cyberintrusions.

Bill Pulte Tapped as Acting Director of National Intelligence

US president Donald Trump has picked Bill Pulte to temporarily act as director of national intelligence. Pulte replaces Tulsi Gabbard, who recently stepped down from the role citing her husband's health issues. Trump has said he is considering other people for the permanent job, but that confirmation process can take months.

As acting director, Pulte would be responsible for the entire US intelligence community, coordinating 18 different agencies including the Central Intelligence Agency and NSA.

Pulte would simultaneously remain in his position as director of the Federal Housing Finance Agency, where he's been busy. Typically, the agency's work involves regulating Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, but Pulte has spent his time issuing multiple criminal referrals to the Justice Department accusing Trump's political enemies of mortgage fraud, including New York attorney general Letitia James, Federal Reserve governor Lisa Cook, and US senator Adam Schiff.

Both Republican and Democratic senators have expressed concerns about Pulte’s pick, which was made as Congress is still debating whether to renew a sweeping surveillance program known as Section 702.

Weird GPS Data Mystery Linked to US Military

For years, GPS satellites have been broadcasting mysterious data in a little-used portion of their public signal. The messages appear random. No one seemed to know exactly what they were for—until now. This week, University College London professor Steven Murdoch published evidence that may solve the mystery. After analyzing millions of archived GPS transmissions spanning nearly two decades, Murdoch concluded that the messages are likely part of the system the US military uses to distribute cryptographic keys to military GPS receivers around the world.

Murdoch borrowed techniques from the world of signals intelligence. He studied how often the messages changed, when satellites synchronized their behavior, and how those patterns evolved over time. One event stood out: In May 2011, nearly every operational GPS satellite abruptly switched to broadcasting the same placeholder message before transitioning to a new pattern. The change coincided with the rollout of a military system known as Over-the-Air Distribution, or OTAD, which allows military GPS receivers to receive updated cryptographic keys remotely rather than requiring them to be physically reprogrammed.

In an interview with WIRED, Murdoch stressed that he didn't crack any military encryption and cannot read the contents of the messages. Instead, his work shows how much can be learned by studying the behavior of a system rather than its secrets. The signals themselves are publicly broadcast and can be received by anyone with the right equipment. By examining years of those transmissions, Murdoch argues, he has uncovered a previously undocumented piece of GPS infrastructure that has been hiding in plain sight.