*follows
Explosive attack on ATM leaves 14 homes damaged in Amsterdam

An explosive attack on an ATM on Maasstraat in Amsterdam early Thursday morning left 14 surrounding homes damaged.

Crime and Courts Read on NL Times
News Image Samsung Offers a Huge Discount on 4K OLED S95C TVs for Anti-Prime Day — Up to $2,200 Off!

Thanks to huge sales on Samsung's OLED TVs, you can host a football night at your place this fall without breaking the bank.

Business Possible ad Read on Gizmodo
News Image Anker’s Soundcore Liberty 4 Pro earbuds add a charging case screen

Anker has released its new Soundcore Liberty 4 Pro wireless earbuds that include improved noise canceling and faster charging than their predecessors. The most obvious change, though, is the upgraded case with a screen to show battery life or adjust ANC settings without grabbing your phone. The Liberty 4 Pro is available now for $129.99, which is $20 cheaper than the $149.99 Soundcore Liberty 4 that debuted in 2022 and $70 cheaper than the previous version, the $169.99 Liberty 3 Pro from 2021. The screen added to the Liberty 4 Pro’s charging case could be a welcome addition for those with battery...

Business Read on The Verge Tech
One in five Dutch young people have seen a slut-shaming "bang list"

Around 1 in 5 young people have come across a "bang list," which ranks girls and young women based on their appearance or how easy they would be to get in bed.

Education Read on NL Times
News Image The Meta Ray-Ban Glasses Have Serious Dad-Brain

The Ray-Ban Meta glasses' AI will confidently lie to you about anything, and just like dad, it thinks everything in big red armor is Iron Man.

Entertainment Read on Gizmodo
News Image Senator Laphonza Butler thinks supporting Big AI or human workers is a ‘false choice’

Representing California in Congress comes with a unique challenge: navigating national politics while reflecting the interests of the most populous state in the US, including a large constituency from the tech industry. It’s a challenge both current California Sen. Laphonza Butler and Vice President Kamala Harris — who previously held that title — have taken on. And right now, governing the tech world means addressing AI. Congress hasn’t made much headway on a national framework for regulating generative AI. But California is the epicenter of the AI industry, home to companies like OpenAI and Google. On the national stage, Harris has acted as an AI czar within the Biden administration, leading discussions with industry players and civil...

Economy Read on The Verge Tech
News Image Inside the Anti-Vax Facebook Group Pushing a Bogus Cure for Autism

Parents of newborns are reporting symptoms including diarrhea, twitching, and “complete toddler meltdowns” after giving them Pure Body Extra detox treatment.

Environment Read on WIRED Science
Ants learned to farm fungi during a mass extinction

We tend to think of agriculture as a human innovation. But insects beat us to it by millions of years. Various ant species cooperate with fungi, creating a home for them, providing them with nutrients, and harvesting them as food. This reaches the peak of sophistication in the leafcutter ants, which cut foliage and return it to feed their fungi, which in turn form specialized growths that are harvested for food. But other ant species cooperate with fungi—in some cases strains of fungus that are also found growing in their environment. Genetic studies have shown that these symbiotic relationships are highly specific—a given ant species will often cooperate with just a single strain of fungus. A number of genes that appear to have evolved rapidly in response to strains of fungi take part in this cooperative relationship. But it has been less clear how the cooperation originally came about, partly because we don't have a good picture of what the undomesticated relatives of these fungi look like. Now, a large international team of researchers has done a study that traces the relationships among a large collection of both fungi and ants, providing a clearer picture of how this form of agriculture evolved. And the history this study reveals suggests that the cooperation between ants and their crops began after the mass extinction that killed the dinosaurs, when little beyond fungi could thrive. Read full article

Environment Read on Ars Technica
News Image Scientists Identify Brain Signal Disruptions Behind Voices in Schizophrenia

Blurring the line between internal and external realities.

Health Read on ScienceAlert
News Image What We Do in the Shadows Summons a Hilarious Season 6 Trailer

The final season of the much-loved vampire comedy arrives October 21 on FX and Hulu.

Entertainment Read on Gizmodo
Microsoft and DOJ disrupt Russian FSB hackers' attack infrastructure

Microsoft and the Justice Department have seized over 100 domains used by the Russian ColdRiver hacking group to target United States government employees and nonprofit organizations from Russia and worldwide in spear-phishing attacks....

Politics Read on Bleeping Computer
News Image Now you can use Apple’s Home Key to get into your garage or home office

Aqara has launched its first-ever smart lever lock, the U300 we saw earlier this year at CES. Available in black or silver for $229.99 on Amazon, the U300 is one of the first smart lever locks to support Matter-over-Thread and Apple Home Key. You can unlock these doors through Aqara’s app or Matter apps like Apple Home, Amazon Alexa, and Google Home, but Aqara also offers a wide range of other entry options, including the built-in fingerprint reader, keypad, or physical keys. Apple Home Key support also means you can just tap your iPhone or Apple Watch to enter, even when they’ve run out of power. Lever locks are typically found on doors for garages, side entries, and home offices. The Verge’s smart home reviewer, Jennifer Tuohy, is...

Technology Possible ad Read on The Verge Tech
DOJ sentences pair for Apple repair scheme involving 6,000 knockoff iPhones

The U.S. Department of Justice Thursday announced that it has sentenced a pair of Chinese citizens residing in Maryland following a massive bid to defraud Apple. According to the officials, the scheme involved sending more than 6,000 knockoff iPhones from Hong Kong to the company for repair. With the help of spoofed IMEI and serial […]

Crime and Courts Read on TechCrunch
News Image Israel has invaded Lebanon. Here’s what could come next.

Israel appears to be expanding a military invasion of Lebanon it initially said would be “limited,” launching hundreds of airstrikes on targets throughout the country, and engaging in ground combat in the country’s south. Several of Israel’s recent strikes have focused on the Lebanese capital Beirut; one of the most recent killed 46 people and wounded 85. In the past days, Israel has also instructed residents of 77 southern towns and villages to flee, telling people to move far north of an internationally recognized border zone — possibly indicating Israel’s intention to move further into Lebanon. These attacks follow weeks of bombing campaigns near and within Beirut, and the Israeli military’s announcement that it transferred one army division, typically numbering around 10,000 troops, to the Lebanese border. The invasion marks a dangerous new phase in the long conflict between Israel and Hezbollah, an Iranian-backed Islamist militant organization and Lebanese political party that has fought Israel since its founding decades ago. Israel has recently escalated its attacks on Hezbollah, assassinating the group’s reclusive leader, Hassan Nasrallah, in a bombing in a Beirut suburb after reportedly launching a series of attacks on thousands of mobile devices used by members of Hezbollah throughout Lebanon.  Israel’s latest operations have been costly: More than 1,000 Lebanese have been killed, 6,000 wounded, and more than a million displaced, according to Lebanese government officials. Hezbollah’s recent attacks on Israel — largely missile strikes — have meanwhile left at least eight people wounded. Close combat in Lebanon’s south has killed eight Israeli soldiers thus far. Although the two sides have fought on and off over the decades, Hezbollah has been engaged in more intense fighting with Israel since the October 7 attacks on Israel by Hamas last year. Hezbollah has vowed to continue its missile strikes into Israeli territory until Israel agrees to a ceasefire in Gaza, where at least 40,000 Palestinians have been killed. Israel has shown no sign it is contemplating ending its operations, either. The country’s leaders have said they want to completely eradicate Hamas, and Israel’s defense minister said Monday that the “next stage in the war against Hezbollah will begin soon.”  Key allies also seem unable to end the fighting. The United States reportedly had a Hezbollah-Israel peace plan that it has now abandoned. While the US has publicly told Israel it should try to deescalate the situation, the US reportedly privately offered Israel support for its Hezbollah strategy.  Meanwhile, Iranian officials have responded to Israel’s recent attacks with a ballistic missile strike on Tuesday. The regime launched at least 180 missiles at Israel, though US forces in the region and Israel’s own missile defense system intercepted most. Iran’s mission to the UN suggested the country did not have further attacks in store, writing on X that the country’s “response … has been duly carried out,” though it added the threat: “Should the Zionist regime dare to respond or commit further acts of malevolence, a subsequent and crushing response will ensue.” Here is what we do know so far about what has happened, and what’s likely to come next. The animosity between Hezbollah and Israel is decades old; in fact, Hezbollah formed in 1982 in southern Lebanon as a response to Israel’s disastrous invasion, which killed tens of thousands of Lebanese, and subsequent decades-long occupation of that area. Hezbollah waged guerilla warfare against Israeli troops for decades, and Israel finally left in 2000 following years of brutal fighting and a UN resolution requiring it to do so.  The two sides settled into a conflict that simmered until 2006. After Hezbollah killed eight Israeli soldiers and captured two others, Israel responded with a counterattack that led to a short, bloody war in which more than 1,000 Lebanese and 160 Israelis were killed. A UN-brokered ceasefire ended that conflict, but fighting continued for years — and it intensified again in the wake of Hamas’s October 7 attack. Hezbollah is allied with Hamas, and, starting on October 8, 2023, began firing major salvos into northern Israel, eventually displacing around 60,000 residents there.  Initially, with Israel focused on uprooting Hamas in Gaza, fighting along its northern border with Lebanon was limited to tit-for-tat strikes. But starting in September, Israel escalated the fighting significantly, first by attacking Hezbollah members and leadership with exploding electronics, then bombing Hezbollah’s stronghold in southern Lebanon and the outskirts of Beirut.  Ever since the October 7 attack, observers have warned about the possibility that Israel’s war with Gaza might spread to encompass Hezbollah and, perhaps, the entire region.  It’s not clear if that’s what’s happening now or what a full-scale war between Israel and Hezbollah might look like. Despite Hezbollah’s previous ability to stand up to Israeli firepower, it’s also not clear how it will fare with its communication networks disrupted by the recent pager and walkie-talkie attacks — which Israel has not claimed but is widely assumed to be behind. What’s more, a significant number of mid-level and senior Hezbollah leaders were killed in that attack and subsequent bombings. Hezbollah is considered the most widely armed and powerful militia group in the Middle East. It boasts a vast weapons arsenal, including as many as 120,000 missiles, and has deployed it with increasing success inside Israel’s borders since the war in Gaza began. Israel claims to have destroyed thousands of the group’s rockets and shells, and Natan Sachs, director of the Middle East policy program at the Brookings Institution, says Israel may have destroyed some of Hezbollah’s precision munitions. Still, Hezbollah has demonstrated advanced military tactics such as using drones to fire missiles at key Israeli targets and effective intelligence capabilities including digital espionage. And recent Israeli attacks on Lebanese mobile devices and the assassination of Nasrallah haven’t completely wiped out that capacity. Hezbollah claimed to strike at least two locations in northern Israel on October 3 — a military site and civilian settlement. “There was kind of this gleefulness about Hezbollah being completely disabled and destroyed now because all the leadership’s gone,” said Phillip Smyth, an independent analyst focusing on the Middle East and terrorism. “That’s not how it works.” But the success of recent Israeli attacks has called into question the extent of Hezbollah’s capabilities — and reportedly shaken Iranian leadership. In that sense, Hezbollah may have limited options going forward, even though it had previously pledged not to relent until a ceasefire in Gaza is reached. On October 3, Israel’s military claimed to have killed more than a dozen Hezbollah militants in an attack in central Beirut. “Hezbollah turns out to be less capable, militarily, than I expected,” Thanassis Cambanis, a senior fellow and director of the think tank Century International, said. Cambanis and other experts believed that Hezbollah had the technology to effectively strike military targets in Israel, as well as civilian infrastructure in Haifa and even Tel Aviv, a major population center. But if it was willing and able, it seems it would have done so by now. “It turns out that Hezbollah wasn’t willing to use its most powerful military options, or that it couldn’t because Israel was able to infiltrate or neutralize Hezbollah capabilities,” Cambanis said.  The group’s second-in-command, Naim Qassem, sought to dispel doubts about Hezbollah’s capabilities in a speech on Monday, though he also seemed to suggest Hezbollah is currently on the defensive. “Israel was not able to reach our military capabilities, and what its media says about hitting most of the medium and long-range capabilities is a dream they have not achieved and will never achieve,” Qassem said. “We will face any possibility and we are ready if the Israelis decide to enter by land and the resistance forces are ready for a ground engagement.” He added that an announcement will be made in the coming days about Nasrallah’s successor, who Smyth said will most likely be Hashem Safieddine, Nasrallah’s handpicked heir and cousin. Safieddine currently oversees  Hezbollah’s political affairs and sits on the council managing the group’s military operations. Tuesday’s missile barrage is Iran’s most escalatory move since April, when the regime sent around 300 missiles and rockets toward Israel, nearly all of which were intercepted by US and regional partner forces, as well as Israel’s own air defenses. Israel has threatened to retaliate against Iran for this latest attack. “The regime in Tehran does not understand our determination to defend ourselves and to exact a price from our enemies,” Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said during a meeting of the country’s security cabinet Tuesday. It’s not clear exactly what form that retaliation will take — whether it will be an outright attack on Iranian territory, more covert actions like assassinations or disruptions to critical infrastructure, or increased attacks against Iranian partner groups. For the most part, Iran asserts its regional power and carries out foreign policy goals — primarily, antagonizing Israel — by funding and providing resources to a network of militia groups. Those include Hamas, Yemen’s Houthi rebels, Shia militia groups in Iraq and Syria, and, of course, Hezbollah. “Iran’s relationship with Hezbollah is really like two NATO allies,” Ali Vaez, director of the Iran project at the International Crisis Group, told Vox last October.  However, while NATO allies pledge to defend one another from attacks, Iran has been reluctant to be actively involved in a war against Israel; a drone attack on Israeli territory in April, following the assassination of an Iranian military leader in an Iranian diplomatic building in Damascus, Syria, was obviously telegraphed and minimally destructive. And the July assassination of Ismail Haniyeh, the former Hamas leader, while he was in Tehran prompted no obvious retaliation. That’s not to say that Iran has no appetite for conflict: “The appetite for them was quite high, to be perfectly frank,” Smyth said. “They just thought that they could micromanage this so that it wouldn’t get to this point. And the Israelis clearly called their bluff.”  Now, it seems, Iran has offered a show of force — but there are limits to how far the country will go. “Escalation could come, but [the Iranians] need to thread a needle,” Sachs said. That involves trying to show solidarity with Hezbollah and that Iran is capable of attack, without getting into an extended war with both Israel and the US.  Israel’s plan for its “limited” ground invasion initially appeared to involve rooting out Hezbollah along Lebanon’s southern border with Israel to neutralize the threat to Israeli communities nearby. However, by Thursday, there were some indications that Israel could move further into Lebanon’s south: The military instructed residents in Lebanon’s southern Nabatieh governorate to move about 36 miles to the north, according to the Associated Press. That’s beyond the Litani River, which serves as the northern border of an internationally recognized border zone between Israel and Lebanon. But there’s a fear that Israel’s narrow mission could balloon into something bigger — much as it already has in Gaza, where Israel’s stated operational objective of eliminating Hamas has given way to widespread destruction of civilian life. If the conflict with Hezbollah does grow, that would likely spur fierce Lebanese resistance. “An invasion of Lebanon will mobilize Lebanese as a national issue to resist, including the many Lebanese who don’t support Israel but also oppose another Israeli invasion and occupation,” Cambanis said. “Perhaps in the short term Israel can achieve some of its aims by pursuing the logic of total war, but it will only make Israel and the entire Middle East less safe.” The Lebanese government — or what passes for it, since an unelected caretaker government has been in place since 2022 — has clearly demonstrated that the country is not interested in yet another war with Israel. Caretaker Prime Minister Najib Mikati announced Monday that his government is prepared to implement UN Security Council Resolution 1701, which ended the 2006 war. That resolution would deploy the Lebanese army to the country’s south to crack down on Hezbollah and require Israel to pull out of southern Lebanon. Now that Israel has entered Lebanon, it’s unclear whether Mikati will trigger the resolution. The conflict has already taken a significant toll on Lebanese civilians and it could only get worse from here. In anticipation, Lebanon and the United Nations petitioned for $426 million in humanitarian aid on Tuesday to help those affected in the next three months. Lebanon has already struggled under decades of war and government dysfunction, as well as an influx of Syrian refugees that have stretched already-limited state capacity. Now, Israel’s bombing attacks and invasion have displaced around 1 million Lebanese from the south of the country, according to Mikati, and the Lebanese government says at least 1,000 people have been killed in the past two weeks.  There seems to be no end in sight for the widening conflict, for several reasons: US unwillingness to restrain Israel by restricting weapons shipments; Hezbollah’s stated position that they will not stop attacks on Israel until a ceasefire with Gaza is reached; and the repeated breakdown of Gaza ceasefire talks. The US and France did attempt to negotiate a 21-day ceasefire between Hezbollah and Israel last week, but “Israel (Netanyahu) has flat out rejected the US-French 21 day ceasefire proposal in Lebanon,” Joel Beinin, a professor of Middle East history at Stanford University, said. As Hezbollah also frames its attacks as support for Gaza, it most likely won’t agree to a ceasefire as long as Gaza is still under attack. As for the US, there seems to be almost no effort to truly restrain Israel following the failed ceasefire attempt.  “The United States is just not driving events,” Michael Hanna, director of the US program at the International Crisis Group, said.  “We support Israel’s right to defend itself against Hezbollah and all Iranian backed terror groups. Of course, we know that mission creep can be a risk and we will keep discussing that with the Israelis. And ultimately, a diplomatic resolution is the only way to achieve lasting stability and security across the Israel-Lebanon border,” a spokesperson from the National Security Council told Vox in an email.  The US could, however, do more to deter escalation; Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-VT) has introduced a resolution to block arms sales to Israel, on the premise that the arms transfers violate international law, although that is unlikely to pass in Congress. Although Lebanon is the current site of the crisis, Israeli military operations are ongoing in Gaza, where as many as 186,000 people may have been killed in the past year of fighting, according to some researchers. (Many media sources put that figure at 40,000, but an accurate count is difficult given that much of Gaza is destroyed and fighting is ongoing.) Medical infrastructure has been destroyed, and there are many reported instances of communicable disease and malnutrition.  “People are getting killed in Gaza daily, the humanitarian situation is dire,” Hanna said. “Life is disrupted and on hold — there are no schools, there’s no functioning society. There’s nothing.” Israel appears to be emboldened by its victories, and Hezbollah appears reluctant to launch large-scale attacks on Israel. The US has maintained its support for Israel and is sending more troops to the region. Iran has issued some threats, but hasn’t yet been much of an active participant in the fighting. All that makes it impossible to say where the war goes from here. Cambanis, however, predicts the worst. “There’s a dangerous and delusional march to war on Iran,” he said. “I would have liked to rely on the US government to restrain Israel, but it’s clear that the Biden administration supports Israel’s widening gyre of escalation.” Update, October 3, 1:50 pm ET: This piece was originally published October 1 and has been updated to include more information about Iran’s missile strikes against Israel, Israel’s missile strikes on Lebanon, and the state of ground operations in southern Lebanon.

Crime and Courts Read on Vox
Dry weather with room for sunshine until Sunday; Rain, higher temps next week

The rest of this week will be dry, with room for the sun to show its face. Friday and Saturday will have an about-equal mix of sunshine and cloud cover.

Environment Read on NL Times
News Image Bird Flu Outbreak Kills Dozens of Tigers and Other Big Cats at Vietnam Zoos

The big cat outbreak is the latest worrying instance of widespread bird flu transmission to mammals.

Environment Read on Gizmodo
News Image Trump Supporters Are Boosting a Clip of a Voting Machine Being Hacked. It's Not What It Seems

The machine hasn't been in use for a decade—and the hacker who exposed a flaw in it says he has confidence this year's election will be run properly.

Politics Read on WIRED Top Stories
Popular gut probiotic completely craps out in randomized controlled trial

Any striking marketing claims in companies' ads about the gut benefits of a popular probiotic may be full of, well, the same thing that has their target audience backed up. In a randomized controlled trial, the probiotic Bifidobacterium animalis subsp. lactis—used in many probiotic products, including Dannon's Activia yogurts—did nothing to improve bowel health in people with constipation, according to data from a randomized triple-blind placebo-controlled clinical trial published Wednesday in JAMA Network Open. The study adds to a mixed and mostly unconvincing body of scientific literature on the bowel benefits of the bacterium, substrains of which are sometimes sold with faux scientific-sounding names in products. Dannon, for instance, previously marketed its substrain, DN-173 010, as "Bifidus regularis." Read full article

Health Read on Ars Technica
News Image World’s Longest Treasure Hunt Ends After 31 Years, 5 Months, and 9 Days

The owl statuette was hidden in 1993 by author Régis Hauser, who died in 2009.

Politics Read on Gizmodo
News Image Joker: Folie à Deux Is an Anti-Sequel That Pretends To Be Great, but Never Is

Joaquin Phoenix and Lady Gaga star in the sequel to the 2019 Oscar-winning DC standalone film.

Entertainment Read on Gizmodo
The TechCrunch Cyber Glossary

This glossary includes some of the most common terms and expressions we use in our articles, and explanations of how — and why — we use them.

Education Read on TechCrunch
Over 4,000 Adobe Commerce, Magento shops hacked in CosmicSting attacks

Approximately 5% of all Adobe Commerce and Magento online stores, or 4,275 in absolute numbers, have been hacked in "CosmicSting" attacks....

Economy Read on Bleeping Computer