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CEO of self-driving startup Motional is stepping down

Motional, the autonomous vehicle startup backed by Hyundai, is shaking up its leadership ranks. Karl Iagnemma, an early pioneer in the autonomous vehicle industry whose startup Nutonomy lies at the foundation of Motional, is stepping down as president and CEO. Iagnemma will move over to a senior strategy advisor role, while CTO Laura Major will […]

Business Read on TechCrunch
News Image Wild Video Captures Baby Tardigrade Riding Its Predator

"I had never seen anything quite like it."

Politics Read on ScienceAlert
News Image Nintendo, The Pokemon Company sue Palworld-maker Pocketpair

Artist's conception of Pocketpair lawyers establishing a defensive position against Nintendo's coming legal onslaught. generally doesn't apply to a game's mere design elements, and only extends to "expressive elements" such as art, character design, and music.

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Craig Newmark pledges $100M to fight hacking by foreign governments

Craig Newmark plans to donate $100 million to further strengthen U.S. cybersecurity. The Craigslist founder tells The Wall Street Journal he is addressing what he sees as a growing threat from foreign governments. Half the funds will focus on protecting power grids and other infrastructure from cyberattacks; the other half will be earmarked to educate […]

Economy Read on TechCrunch
News Image Agatha All Along is a whimsical road trip through Marvel’s world of witchcraft

Disney Plus’ new WandaVision spinoff series steers clear of the franchise’s multiversal messiness to do its own thing.

Entertainment Read on The Verge
News Image Pokémon with guns? All the latest on viral gaming hit Palworld

The multiplayer survival game Palworld was 2024’s biggest surprise, and now it’s being sued by Nintendo.

Entertainment Read on The Verge
News Image US Senate Warns Big Tech to Act Fast Against Election Meddling

In an Intelligence Committee hearing with representatives from Google, Apple, and Meta on Wednesday, senators stressed that foreign influence is far from a solved problem.

Crime and Courts Read on WIRED Top Stories
News Image GTA V, one of the most popular Steam Deck games, is now ‘unsupported’

Grand Theft Auto V was one of the top ten most played games on Valve’s Steam Deck handheld this past week. It’s been in the top twenty for at least two years. But as of today, Valve now lists the game as “unsupported” — because developer Rockstar mysteriously broke compatibility with Valve’s handheld for its online modes. As you can see in the image above, this is the latest fight around Linux anti-cheat: like the developers of Fortnite and Roblox, Rockstar has decided not to support the Steam Deck with its new anti-cheat software for GTA Online — a game that, by all accounts, badly needed to deal with cheaters. (Outside the Steam Deck, better anti-cheat was probably a good move.) But unlike Fortnite and Roblox, Rockstar is...

Entertainment Read on The Verge Tech
News Image LinkedIn is training AI models on your data

If you’re on LinkedIn, then you should know that the social network has, without asking, opted accounts into training generative AI models. 404Media reports that LinkedIn introduced the new privacy setting and opt-out form before rolling out an updated privacy policy saying that data from the platform is being used to train AI models. As TechCrunch notes, it has since updated the policy. We may use your personal data to improve, develop, and provide products and Services, develop and train artificial intelligence (AI) models, develop, provide, and personalize our Services, and gain insights with the help of AI, automated systems, and inferences, so that our Services can be more relevant and useful to you and others. LinkedIn writes on a...

Business Read on The Verge Tech
News Image Watch Squid Game Stars Chuckle Over Season 2 Fan Theories

Netflix's smash hit thriller returns December 26, and Emmy-winning star Lee Jung-jae and his castmates are here to reveal mostly nothing about what to expect.

Entertainment Read on Gizmodo
News Image The biggest unanswered questions about the Hezbollah pager attack

Over the past two days, the Iran-backed militant group Hezbollah has been targeted with an attack as sophisticated and audacious as it is brutal, with the devices in their own pockets turned into deadly weapons.  On Tuesday, hundreds of pagers distributed by Hezbollah to its members and associates in Lebanon and Syria exploded, killing at least 12 people, including two children, and injuring nearly 3,000. Then, in a follow-up attack on Wednesday, thousands of two-way radios used by the group exploded, killing nine people and wounding some 300, some of whom had been attending the funerals of those killed in the earlier attack. There have also been reports of solar energy systems exploding in several areas of Lebanon, but few details have been reported about these incidents.   Hezbollah quickly blamed Israel for the attack. While the Israeli government has not yet commented — it rarely comments on covert actions abroad — experts and media reports are generally assuming it was responsible. It’s hard to think of another regional actor with the ability and motivation to carry out such an unprecedented operation. The attack has stunned former intelligence operatives with both its scale and sophistication. “This is a hell of an opp,” Marc Polymeropoulos, a former CIA counterterrorism specialist now with the Atlantic Council, told Vox. “It’s probably the most impressive kinetic intelligence operation I’ve ever seen.” Beyond demonstrating the prowess of the Mossad, Israel’s foreign intelligence agency, what’s less clear is what this tells us about Israel’s overall strategic goals, not to mention how Hezbollah will respond or how this will impact the outcome of this conflict or conflicts in the future. Here are a few of the biggest outstanding questions and what we know about the answers. The emerging consensus from experts and media reports is that small amounts of explosive material were placed inside the pagers. Some reports have suggested the explosive was detonated by malware that raised the temperature of the batteries in the pagers, but US officials told the New York Times that the devices were also implanted with switches that detonated the explosive remotely. According to the Times, the pagers received simultaneous messages on Tuesday that appeared to be from Hezbollah’s senior leadership, but instead caused the devices to beep for several seconds and then explode.  The pagers were from a shipment of 3,000 that Hezbollah says they ordered from Gold Apollo, a Taiwanese company. But Gold Apollo says they were actually made by BAC Consulting, a company based in Hungary, and that the Taiwanese firm merely licensed its design and trademark. Reporters have so far been unable to contact BAC, and former intelligence officials who spoke with Vox said it’s questionable whether the company even makes pagers.  Hezbollah had reportedly switched from using cellphones to old-fashioned pagers several months ago to avoid Israeli surveillance. Communications are generally a point of vulnerability for militant groups. Earlier this week, the Wall Street Journal reported that Hamas’s top leader, Yahya Sinwar, has abandoned electronics entirely and now relies on a system of human couriers and coded handwritten messages for communication. The attack comes several weeks after the assassination of Hamas leader Ismail Haniyeh in Tehran, reportedly by a bomb that had been planted by Israeli agents in a guesthouse in the Iranian capital months earlier. It also comes several days after a rare raid by Israeli ground forces in Syria that destroyed an alleged underground Iranian missile factory.    “What we have seen over the past two months shows that Israel and its intelligence apparatus have completely infiltrated the most sensitive echelons of the entire Axis of Resistance,” said Charles Lister, senior fellow at the Middle East Institute, referring to the informal name for Iran’s network of proxy militias throughout the Middle East.  It was only a year ago when the reputation of Israel’s intelligence services took a major hit with the failure to anticipate the October 7 attacks, despite abundant signs that Hamas was preparing for a major operation. It’s worth noting that while the operations in Lebanon and Iran were likely carried out by the Mossad, Israel’s foreign intelligence service, Israeli-occupied Gaza is the responsibility of the Shin Bet, the domestic security service. The Shin Bet official responsible for Southern Israel and Gaza resigned over that failure, as have two senior military intelligence officials.  Polymeropoulos said that while October 7 damaged the reputation of Israel’s vaunted spy services, “they have now restored that notion of deterrence based on fear, this notion that Israel has eyes everywhere.” Emily Harding, a former CIA analyst and director of the Intelligence, National Security, and Technology Program at the Center for Strategic and International Studies, noted that prior to October 7, Israel had shifted many of its intelligence resources away from Hamas toward Iran and regional proxy groups like Hezbollah. Over the past year, attention has obviously shifted to Gaza, she said, “but at the same time, they’ve clearly decided they’re not going to tolerate an imminent threat on their northern border” with Lebanon.  Even as the war in Gaza has raged, Israel and Hezbollah have been exchanging fire over the Israel-Lebanon border, displacing tens of thousands of civilians on both sides. While Israel reportedly backed away from plans to launch a major preemptive strike against Hezbollah in the early days of the war, senior Israeli officials, most notably Defense Minister Yoav Gallant, have repeatedly said that a military assault will be needed to deal with the threat on Israel’s northern border.  Earlier this week, Israel’s security cabinet added restoring security to the north as one of its primary war aims. Without referring specifically to the pager and walkie-talkie attacks, Gallant said on Wednesday that a “new phase” of the war with Hezbollah had begun.    The question now is whether the attacks were launched as preparation for some major military action, or whether — contradictory as it may seem — this was conceived as a way to de-escalate tensions by putting Hezbollah on its heels, at least for a little while. For the moment, this second possibility looks more likely. Despite Gallant’s declaration, Israel doesn’t appear to be taking advantage of the chaos in Lebanon to launch a military invasion. It’s also possible that the timing of the attack wasn’t intentional at all. The Middle East-focused news site Al-Monitor reported on Tuesday that Israel had intended to wait longer to detonate the devices but was “forced” to move more quickly by reports that some Hezbollah members were starting to think there was something odd about their pagers.    Hezbollah has vowed to retaliate, saying Israel would receive its “fair punishment for the attacks.” The militia’s leader Hassan Nasrallah says he will give a speech on Thursday to address the “latest developments.” But Hezbollah’s ability to strike back may be limited by the state of chaos it currently finds itself in. “They almost certainly have little to no communication or the infrastructure to be able to coordinate not just an initial round of a retaliation, but whatever would come next,” said Lister. Harding predicted that Hezbollah’s next move is likely to be a “big internal mole hunt to try to figure out where their vulnerabilities are.” After the follow-up explosions on Thursday, “they can’t trust anything that they have right now.” Iran, whose ambassador to Lebanon was among those injured by the blasts — not a huge surprise given the close links between Iran and Hezbollah — has also claimed the right to respond. The question is whether this would go beyond the missile strike it launched in April in response to Israel’s bombing of the Iranian consulate, which killed two senior generals. Though that barrage was unprecedented in scale, most of the missiles were intercepted by Israel’s defenses, with the assistance of several other countries including the US, and the attack caused little damage.  Iran President Masoud Pezeshkian also said the US shared responsibility for the attack, given its support for Israel, though Secretary of State Antony Blinken said the US had no advance knowledge of the operation. The Washington Post’s David Ignatius wrote on Wednesday that the attacks mark the start of a “very dangerous era in cyberwarfare” in which “any device that is connected to the internet can potentially be transformed into a weapon.” But some perspective is needed. The devices themselves were not weapons. Hackers have warned in the past that it’s possible to use malware to remotely tamper with or even detonate a device’s battery, but to cause the kind of damage seen this week, you need old-fashioned explosives. As a matter of technology, this isn’t a huge advance over Israel’s killing of Hamas bomb maker Yahya Ayyash using an exploding cellphone in 1996.  From a technical point of view, what was impressive was Israel’s apparent ability to “hack” the supply chain and insert explosives into so many devices. There probably aren’t that many situations other than this one where that’s possible. As Axios’s Colin Demarest writes, referring to worries that the US could be vulnerable to such an attack, “the Pentagon is unlikely to buy thousands of C-4-laden pagers for top brass.” Your iPhone is probably safe, too.  But this week’s attacks represent something radically new in terms of tactics, if not technology. In international law, “booby traps” are prohibited under many circumstances, and given how many devices were detonated and the fact that civilians, including children, were injured and killed, there are questions about whether the attack met international legal standards.  And then there’s the issue of whether other actors — either nation-states or militant groups — might now attempt something similar in the future. Colin Clarke, director of research at the Soufan Group, a think tank focused on counterterrorism, compared the attack to the early use of deadly drone strikes by the US. Once mainly the provenance of the US, killer drones have now spread widely to both state and non-state actors.  Wars like the current conflict in the Middle East are “often laboratories of innovation for all sides,” Clarke said. “We’re going to see militant groups developing new tricks and trying to leverage emerging technologies in new ways.” Given the vast number of connected devices now in homes and businesses all over the world, there’s no lack of potential targets. Even if it would be difficult for anyone to pull off another similar attack of this scale, Clarke said it’s the sort of precedent-setting example that “could give bad people good ideas.”  Few things spread faster than innovative ways to kill people in war.

Crime and Courts Read on Vox
News Image The Franchise‘s Creators Reveal What They’d Do to Save Superhero Movies

The answer is not as cynical as you'd expect from the people behind a biting satire of the superhero movie industry.

Entertainment Read on Gizmodo
News Image Ukraine’s dramatic drone strikes on Russia are about making the case for more aid

Ukraine’s military apparently launched a drone attack against a weapons depot in Russia’s Tver region Wednesday, causing a blast detectable from space. The large-scale attack occurred near the village of Toropets, about 240 miles west of Moscow, according to Russian military bloggers. According to Russian state media, the attack was so intense the town of Toropets had to be evacuated.  The Tver attack follows another showy Ukrainian operation on Russian soil: August’s shock offensive into Russia’s Kursk region that has captured about 500 square miles of territory. Both are likely efforts by Ukraine to put itself in a better position to end Russia’s two-and-a-half-year war, which has devastated parts of the country — particularly in the south and east. While no peace talks are currently scheduled, Ukraine’s strategy could theoretically put it in a stronger negotiating position should talks happen, while also damaging Russia’s morale, ability to resupply, and its ability to launch devastating strikes within Ukraine.  Ukraine has long argued it could achieve more battlefield victories if the Biden administration would allow the military to use US-made long-range weapons to strike targets further in Russia.  The Tver strike and the Kursk incursion are likely meant to send a signal to allies that despite the war grinding on, Ukraine isn’t beaten, and that its allies aren’t backing a lost cause. That’s especially important in the leadup to the November US election, when a change in the White House could affect US political and material support for Ukraine, as former President Donald Trump and other Republican candidates have signaled a coolness to continued material support for the war effort.  Essentially, Ukraine’s message is: We’re doing well in the fight against Russia, and would do even better with more advanced weapons. However, despite Ukraine’s flashy successes since the Kursk offensive, it’s unclear — and possibly unlikely — that the Biden administration will give Ukraine both the materiel and the go-ahead to use it the way they want. The target of the drone attack, according to Ukrainian sources cited in reporting, was a weapons depot that held conventional weapons like artillery shells and ballistic missiles. Those weapons, as well as the fuel tanks reportedly stored at the depot, could account for the explosive visuals being circulated on Telegram, a favorite platform for Russian military bloggers. Experts note that though the Tver attack has attracted attention due to the size of the explosion, it’s not an isolated strike: “Ukrainian forces are conducting a consistent drone strike campaign into rear areas of Russia, targeting oil refineries and military airfields, military ammunition depots, and logistics facilities,” Riley Bailey, a senior researcher on Russia at the Institute for the Study of War, told Vox. “This one just seems to be very effective.” The successful drone attacks, Bailey said, could disrupt Russian military logistics within Russia — as longer-range Ukrainian missile attacks did against Russian military installations within Ukraine in summer 2022. Disrupting logistics and resupply within Russia could,  over time, hamper Russia’s ability to defend itself from attacks on its own soil; mount offensive campaigns within Ukraine; and force the military to rebuild and rearrange its supply capabilities. “If there was this persistent threat of Ukrainian forces being able to achieve similar effects at several logistics facilities like this, then that would impose the same kind of operational pressure that Russian forces faced back in the summer of 2022,” Bailey said. Ukraine has always been outgunned and outmanned against Russia; without continued US and NATO support, the Ukrainian military can’t continue to fight. But, Ukrainian leadership has long argued, they could do much more significant damage to Russian supplies and strategy if the US allowed them to use long-range weapons to hit targets deep into Russian territory.  The apparently successful Tver attack comes as Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy is set to present his victory plan to US President Joe Biden during a visit to the US later in September. Though details are scarce, that plan seems intent on using military force to push Russia into negotiations to end the war. A pillar of the plan likely depends on continued weapons support and looser permissions around how those weapons are used. The US has been hesitant to grant those permissions in order to not be seen as directly involved or escalating the conflict — and therefore inviting Russia to do the same. However, fears about escalation haven’t played out on the battlefield, Amb. William Courtney, an adjunct senior fellow at the RAND Corporation, told Vox.  “Russian reaction, generally, has not been to escalate,” he said. “It’s been to adapt and try to counter.”  But even if the Biden administration allowed Ukraine to use longer-range missiles in its arsenal to attack Russian positions, it might not have a major impact, according to Jennifer Kavanagh, senior fellow and director of military analysis at Defense Priorities. “There are not that many Russian military targets in range of even the longer range missiles with additional permissions, and Russia can move valuable assets elsewhere, further reducing any losses from Ukrainian strikes,” she said. Plus, Ukraine wouldn’t be able to get enough of those weapons to mount the kind of sustained attacks that would make a long-term difference in the war.  Still, Ukraine appears to be pressing ahead with its strategy and hoping that the Biden administration gets on board with the plan for victory — and that even if long-range capabilities aren’t the key to winning the war, they’ll at least make Russia’s war increasingly difficult and costly to execute.

Crime and Courts Read on Vox
News Image “Dead Internet theory” comes to life with new AI-powered social media app

Enlarge like ChatGPT increasingly generate text and even social media interactions found online. The theory says that most social Internet activity today is artificial and designed to manipulate humans for engagement. On Monday, software developer Michael Sayman launched a new AI-populated social network app called SocialAI that feels like it's bringing that conspiracy theory to life, allowing users to interact solely with AI chatbots instead of other humans. It's available on the iPhone app store, but so far, it's picking up pointed criticism. After its creator announced SocialAI as "a private social network where you receive millions of AI-generated comments offering feedback, advice & reflections on each post you make," computer security specialist Ian Coldwater quipped on X, "This sounds like actual hell." Software developer and frequent AI pundit Colin Fraser expressed a similar sentiment: "I don’t mean this like in a mean way or as a dunk or whatever but this actually sounds like Hell. Like capital H Hell."

Entertainment Read on Ars Technica