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WIRED

‘Avatar: Aang, The Last Airbender’ Leaked Online. Some Fans Say Paramount Deserves the Fallout NASA Wants to Put Nuclear Reactors on the Moon AI Could Democratize One of Tech's Most Valuable Resources Microsoft Surface PCs Are Getting Big Price Hikes, and the Cheaper Models Are Going Away Why Amazon Is Buying Globalstar—and What It Means for Your iPhone The US Government Will Ask Data Centers How Much Power They Use MAGA Is Starting to Look Beyond Trump Allbirds Is Pivoting to AI Compute. Sure, Why Not Best Smart Smoke Detector (and Why You Still Need a Dumb One) 12 Best Standing Desks of 2026, Tested and Reviewed Best Wi-Fi Routers of 2026 for Working, Gaming, and Streaming Best GoPro Camera (2026): Compact, Budget, Accessories The Caves That Could Help Us Find, or Become, Aliens AI Slop Is Making the Internet Fake-Happy 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 Top iRestore Deals for Hair Growth and LED Therapy Devices Meta Is Warned That Facial Recognition Glasses Will Arm Sexual Predators You Should Be More Freaked Out by Shingles BYD’s Fastest-Charging Car in the World Is Astonishing—in Good and Bad Ways The 4 Best Water Filter Pitchers (2026): PFAS, Microplastics The Internet's Most Powerful Archiving Tool Is in Peril The Dumbest Hack of the Year Exposed a Very Real Problem AI Agents Are Coming for Your Dating Life ‘The Audacity’ Is the Broligarchy Takedown You Were Waiting For Why Is It So Hard to Fix an Electric Bike? (2026) Best 2-in-1 Laptops (2026): Microsoft, Lenovo, and the iPad There’s a Secret Ingredient to Making Luxury Ice at Home The Screen Time Legends Who Won't Put Down Their Phones Mammotion’s Spino E1 Is Affordable but Doesn’t Quite Deliver You Don’t Have to Drink Lukewarm Coffee Ever Again. Get a Warmer Zuvi ColorBox Review: Please Just Go to a Professional MacBook Neo vs. MacBook Air: Which One Should You Buy? Best Electric Cargo Bikes (2026): Urban Arrow, Lectric, Tern, and More ‘Crimson Desert’ Is a Cat Dad Simulator Your Push Notifications Aren’t Safe From the FBI Flight Path Data Shows How Mosquitoes Target Humans How the Internet Broke Everyone’s Bullshit Detectors The All-Clad Factory Seconds Sale Is Back—for Now (2026) Artemis II Astronauts Safely Return to Earth After Historic Flight Around the Moon Home Depot Spring Black Friday (2026): Best Tool and Grill Deals Motorola’s Souped-Up Folding Phone Is Almost Half Off Anthropic’s Mythos Will Force a Cybersecurity Reckoning—Just Not the One You Think The Future of the Artemis Program Is Riding on Reentry Suspect Arrested for Allegedly Throwing Molotov Cocktail at Sam Altman’s Home "Uncanny Valley": OpenAI and Musk Fight Again; DOJ Mishandles Voter Data; Artemis II Comes Home This Clever Bike Bell Can Even Be Heard by People Wearing Noise-Canceling Headphones This Startup Wants You to Pay Up to Talk With AI Versions of Human Experts I Did Not Catch Air on the Aventon Current Electric Mountain Bike, but I Could Have Best Smart Shades, Blinds, and Curtains (2026): Motorized, Tailor-Made, and More How 'Democracy Now!' Became the Blueprint for Indie Media AI Podcasters Really Want to Tell You How to Keep a Man Happy Irrigreen's New Smart Irrigation System Promises Smart Watering Without the Hassle—Almost No One Knows Where US Vaccine Policy Goes Next I Tried Asus' First Open Earbuds for Gamers Meta’s New AI Asked for My Raw Health Data—and Gave Me Terrible Advice How and When to Watch the Artemis II Mission’s Return to Earth Naturepedic Promo Codes: Get 20% Off Plus Free Pillows Hungryroot Coupon Codes: 30% Off This April Govee Discount Codes and Deals: 30% Off We-Vibe Coupon Offers: Couples’ Toys and Gift Set Discounts Sealy Promo Code: Save $200 on Mattresses This Month OpenAI Backs Bill That Would Limit Liability for AI-Enabled Mass Deaths or Financial Disasters China Is Cracking Down on Scams. Just Not the Ones Hitting Americans The 70-Person AI Image Startup Taking on Silicon Valley's Giants Save $20 on This Already Inexpensive Wireless Mic Set John Deere Is Paying Farmers $99 Million for Allegedly Monopolizing Repair The Iran War Is Tearing MAGA Influencers Apart The FBI Didn’t Answer Texts From Minnesota Investigators for Days After Renee Good’s Killing The Pro-Iran Meme Machine Trolling Trump With AI Lego Cartoons Ridge Wallet Review: A Beacon for the Overencumbered How Meta Cafeteria Workers Took on ICE—and Won Get Peace of Mind With This GPS and Activity Tracker for Pets I Asked Netflix’s Reality TV Boss Why So Many Men On Dating Shows Are Terrible I Tried TCL’s Samsung Frame Competitor and It Didn’t Compare Politicians Are Spending More Money on Security as They Increasingly Become Targets This AI Wearable From Ex-Apple Engineers Looks Like an iPod Shuffle Artemis II Astronauts Witnessed 6 Meteorites Colliding With the Moon Medicube Coupon Code: 40% Off for April 2026 Top Instacart Promo Code: $15 Off for July 2026 Vivid Seats Promo Codes and Deals: Get 10% Off Birdfy Discount Codes: 15% Off Sitewide Google Workspace Promo Codes: 14% Off for June Paramount+ Coupon Codes and Deals for June 2026 NZXT Discount Codes: 50% Off in June 2026 LG Promo Codes and Coupons for June 2026 AT&T Promo Codes: $50 Off This June 2026 TurboTax Full Service Coupons This June Top Peacock Promo Codes: 40% Off June 2026 Therabody Promo Codes: 15% Off June 2026 Surfshark Promo Codes: 87% Off | June 2026 Nomad Goods Promo Codes: Get 25% Off in June 2026 20% Off Sephora Promo Code | June 2026 30% Off Canon Promo Codes | June 2026 Factor Promo Codes for July 2026 Top Dell Coupon Codes: 20% Off for June 2026 Walmart Promo Codes: Up to 65% Off for June 2026 What Is the Best Fitness Tracker in 2026? Garmin, Oura, More
Disneyland Now Uses Face Recognition on Visitors
Lily Hay New · 2026-05-02 · via WIRED

A gunman attempted to enter the White House Correspondents’ Dinner in Washington, DC, last weekend, while President Donald Trump, Vice President JD Vance, and other administration officials were in attendance. Media reports and Trump himself quickly identified the suspected shooter as 31-year-old engineer and computer scientist Cole Tomas Allen. The California resident was arrested at the scene on Saturday and appeared Monday in the US District Court for the District of Columbia to face three federal charges: attempting to assassinate the president, transportation of a firearm in interstate commerce, and discharge of a firearm during a crime of violence.

The authentication standards body known as the FIDO Alliance announced working groups this week along with Google and Mastercard to develop technical guardrails for validating and protecting transactions initiated by an AI agent. Meanwhile, given the proliferation and increasing sensitivity of some work using AI, OpenAI rolled out an “advanced” security risk mode for ChatGPT and Codex accounts facing heightened risk of attack.

New research this week shed light on an incident in which 90,000 screenshots pulled from a European celebrity's phone were exposed online—underscoring the risks of commercially available spyware both as an invasion of personal privacy and a threat for widespread data breaches and abuse. And WIRED looked at arrests in the United Arab Emirates resulting from people sharing screenshots and other online content.

And there’s more. 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.

The Happiest Place on Earth just got a bit creepier. The Walt Disney Company announced this week that visitors to its Disneyland Park and Disney California Adventure Park will have the option to “choose” to enter the park through a lane that’s equipped with face recognition technology. While the company says subjecting yourself to face recognition is “entirely optional,” it notes that “you may still have your image taken” if you enter the parks through lanes without face recognition systems. Disney’s face recognition, like many others, works by converting images of people’s faces into a numerical value, which can then be used to match faces in other images. The company says these numerical values will be deleted after 30 days, “except in cases where data must be maintained for legal or fraud-prevention purposes.”

Face recognition systems are widely used across the United States and the world. Law enforcement agencies frequently use the technology, but it has also proliferated into everyday aspects of life, from airports to MLB and NFL stadiums to Madison Square Garden.

The NSA Is Testing Out Anthropic’s Mythos AI Tool for Discovering Hackable Bugs

Anthropic’s Mythos Preview AI model has been described as so adept at digging up hackable bugs in software that its use has so far been carefully restricted to prevent it from falling into the hands of malicious hackers. So perhaps it would be more of a surprise if the National Security Agency was not already trying it out.

Bloomberg News and Axios reported this week that the NSA was among the agencies and companies granted early access to Mythos, which has been limited to 40 organizations so far, according to Axios. The agency has used the tool to hunt for bugs in Microsoft’s software—naturally, given that it still runs on the majority of the world’s PCs—and has been impressed with its speed and effectiveness in finding exploitable vulnerabilities, according to sources who spoke anonymously to Bloomberg. The agency’s remit, after all, includes some elements of helping the US government discover and patch security vulnerabilities in the software it uses, as well as sometimes exploiting those vulnerabilities in the NSA’s own operations.

The NSA’s testing or adoption of Anthropic’s AI tool appears to have proceeded in spite of the Department of Defense’s declared ban on Anthropic, which followed Defense secretary Pete Hegseth’s claim that the company represented a supply chain risk. Hegseth said in February, however, that the DOD will transition away from Anthropic’s tools over six months, and Anthropic has sued to prevent the ban from being enacted. Given that the NSA is part of the DOD, it’s not clear for now whether the NSA is merely using Mythos in the window before the ban goes into effect, or if the tool is powerful enough to persuade the NSA to rethink its ban—or make an exception.

19-Year-Old Alleged Member of Scattered Spider Ransomware Group Arrested

The ransomware group known as Scattered Spider has been responsible for some of the most damaging extortion-focused hacking campaigns in recent memory, including the breaches of MGM Resorts, Caesars Entertainment, and retailers like M&S and Harrods. It’s also distinguished among ransomware gangs for its membership: Often very young, English-speaking hackers based in countries who are cooperative with US law enforcement—and, therefore, tend to get arrested.

The latest alleged member of the group to be identified and charged is 19-year-old Peter Stokes, who was arrested at an airport in Finland, where he intended to board a flight to Japan. According to the Chicago Tribune, Stokes’ alleged involvement in the targeting of four Scattered Spider victim companies is described in a criminal complaint that has since been placed under seal. Stokes is reportedly accused of helping to steal millions from those unidentified victim companies, which included an online communications platform and a luxury retailer. According to the complaint, he also led a jet-set life, traveling from Dubai to Thailand to New York and appearing in one photo wearing a diamond-studded necklace that read “HACK THE PLANET.”

Medicare Database Exposes Health Care Providers’ Social Security Numbers

A Medicare database left accessible on the open internet inadvertently revealed the Social Security numbers and other personal information for health care providers around the US, the Washington Post reports. The database was linked to an online director for the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS), which allowed Medicare patients to check which insurance plans health care providers accept. According to the Post, the exposed sensitive data was online for “at least several weeks.” Rollout of the directory is part of an effort by the Trump administration to “create a national database of health care providers,” the Post reports, which is being overseen by Amy Gleason, the acting head of the US DOGE Service who also serves as an official at CMS.