Salta al contenuto principale



National Guard Accidentally Sends Evidence Of Troop Disillusionment To The Washington Post





Treasury Department says it will 'fully cooperate' with House Oversight panel's Epstein probe


The Treasury Department told the House Oversight Committee it will turn over certain bank activity reports related to the panel's Jeffrey Epstein investigation, according to a letter shared with CNN.

"The Department of the Treasury (Treasury) plans to fully cooperate with the Committee and intends to provide all information responsive to your request in a timely manner and compliant with the law," a letter from the Treasury Department sent to the committee on Friday reads.

The bank records, known as Suspicious Activity Reports (SARs), include sensitive information and require a specific process for how they get shared. Such reports are not conclusive and do not necessarily indicate wrongdoing. Financial institutions file millions of suspicious activity reports each year, and few lead to law enforcement inquiries.




The Mystique of New Mauville in Pokemon's Hoenn


In the third generation of Pokémon games, and in their remakes inside the Hoenn region, New Mauville is a well-known late-game location, physically

stuff.octt.eu.org/2025/09/new-…



'What an idiot': Trump's attack dog mocked as 'mortgage fraud' allegation crumbles




Anonymity is dead and we’re all content now


One night, a friend of mine went out for dinner with her husband and toddler. The toddler, who sometimes had trouble swallowing, choked on his food — and threw up, repeatedly, in the restaurant. People around them were laughing while my friend and her family were in distress, adding to their embarrassment. But that wasn’t the worst part, she told me. She thought someone might have been filming. What if a video of her child being sick went viral? What if the awful laughter at the restaurant never ended?

Social media has long been a game of roulette with fame at one end and public disgrace at the other. But if I am posting under my government name on Bluesky (or Facebook, or X, or Nextdoor, or whatever), at least I know I am rolling the dice on becoming the next unwitting bean dad, Brienne of Snarth, or Justine Sacco. Now all it takes to become the internet’s main character is to appear in public, where people film each other to perform the dual task of policing behavior and creating potential viral content.

Look, it’s easy to see why that Coldplay couple went viral. The exaggerated response to being on camera — and trying to duck an arena’s kiss cam — is funny. The couple is possibly cheating (immoral, loathed by TikTok) and Chris Martin (the man who knowingly married Gwyneth Paltrow and then consciously uncoupled!) gets a good dunk in. All someone had to do was identify them, and they had one of the world’s most powerful accelerants: the bad behavior of a CEO with one of his employees. It was perfect internet content.

The fact that it’s perfect internet content is also what encourages us to surveil each other. And the consequences of the funny internet video were very real. The CEO resigned. His former subordinate is getting a divorce, which I know because People and E! News reported on the filing as news. The humiliation didn’t end with the viral video — it’s still ongoing, and by writing about it, I am in some sense participating.

This is all possible because our society built a panopticon that any of us can use against any other at will. And while virality isn’t new, TikTok’s algorithm makes it easier than ever for videos to take off unexpectedly, because users don’t even have to share the video to make it go wide. You don’t even have to get caught on a kiss cam at a concert.





New Mullvad update deploys QUIC obfuscation on WireGuard to circumvent censorship


  • Mullvad has added QUIC obfuscation for WireGuard on its desktop apps
  • The protocol lets users blend in with regular traffic to bypass censorship
  • An increasing number of VPNs now offer anti-censorship tools

https://www.techradar.com/vpn/vpn-privacy-security/now-you-see-me-now-you-dont-mullvad-introduces-quic-to-disguise-wireguard-traffic

#tech





UK workers wary of AI despite Starmer’s push to increase uptake: A third of those polled do not tell bosses about use of tools and half think AI threatens the social structure


::: spoiler Comments
- Reddit.
:::

It is the work shortcut that dare not speak its name. A third of people do not tell their bosses about their use of AI tools amid fears their ability will be questioned if they do.

Research for the Guardian has revealed that only 13% of UK adults openly discuss their use of AI with senior staff at work and close to half think of it as a tool to help people who are not very good at their jobs to get by.

Questa voce è stata modificata (1 giorno fa)



Second Michigan lawmaker targeted by bomb threat




Visited price comparison site and in less than a minute received a dodgy text


As per title, I visited a price comparison site this morning, and within a minute (I think less than 30 seconds) got a dodgy text to use 'their' site. I hadn't even chosen a category. This site takes peoples home addresses, phone numbers and other info.

Is the site hijacked/infected or is my phone?

The site is bonkers.ie a site in Ireland for comparing prices of broadband, electricity or TV etc.
Link to screenshot of text as I can't upload on Lemmy because of VPN.

i.postimg.cc/rF9DXHbT/IMG-2025…



The DOJ has censored its own website that states right wing terrorism is 7 times deadlier than left wing. Here’s the archive.


Since 1990, right wing terrorists in the US have killed at least 520 people. The extreme left have in the same time killed 78.



Widespread Disinformation Online About Kirk Shooting: Utah Governor


(Sorry, couldn’t find a working paywall remover. Anyone have a working one?)

There’s a “tremendous amount of disinformation” being shared online about the fatal shooting of Charlie Kirk, some of it coming from overseas, Utah Gov. Spencer Cox said. “What we’re seeing is our adversaries want violence,” he said Thursday night at a media briefing attended by FBI Director Kash Patel, who didn’t speak.

“We have bots from Russia, China, all over the world that are trying to instill disinformation and encourage violence,” Cox said, as he urged the public to take a break from social media.

https://www.wsj.com/livecoverage/charlie-kirk-shot/card/widespread-disinformation-online-about-kirk-shooting-utah-governor-bTG2bn07f80zKsRIjxHx?gaa_at=eafs&gaa_n=ASWzDAhjhpiy93mzkU0_xe3RCWSKnU7szbeHJ0emHJgFIylAZS-VzBWoymYt&gaa_ts=68c56b89&gaa_sig=7xHjp7L9Gg6wZlf7s0KucZ9q_WRU10rnE708T2Z1tr8qZtuWmavj2MfBDX-1N6WIJXeYJV7ls1doGDq5RxC8tA%3D%3D



Windows 11 may nag you now when your Microsoft 365 subscription expires


cross-posted from: programming.dev/post/37369375

We’re introducing a simple reminder that appears as a SCOOBE screen (Second Chance Out of Box Experience) to let you know your Microsoft subscription needs attention (for example, if a renewal payment didn’t go through). In just a few clicks, you can review and update your payment method and keep your subscription benefits uninterrupted.

Windows Blogs



Windows 11 may nag you now when your Microsoft 365 subscription expires


We’re introducing a simple reminder that appears as a SCOOBE screen (Second Chance Out of Box Experience) to let you know your Microsoft subscription needs attention (for example, if a renewal payment didn’t go through). In just a few clicks, you can review and update your payment method and keep your subscription benefits uninterrupted.


Windows Blogs




Governor Stein Announces NC Film and Entertainment Grant Program Awardees




Union Letter To NASA MSFC Employees


“All, Yesterday afternoon MESA received official notification from MSFC Center Director Pelfrey that MSFC will comply with Executive Order 14343 – Further Exclusions From the Federal Labor-Management Relations Program (link below). This may be the last email I am able to send to you in this fashion as one of your union representatives as MSFC is choosing to comply with the President’s determination that your jobs are primarily “intelligence, counterintelligence, investigatory, or national security” in nature. Therefore, MSFC will be canceling our labor contract, which was ratified by MESA membership and approved by NASA last year...

Some of you may – rightfully – be asking what [Marshall Engineers and Scientists Association] is doing about all this. We will still be here. We will continue to provide advice, assistance, and support – it will just have to be during your lunch break, after hours, or on weekends. We are training new stewards and building multiple committees to focus on various aspects of our representational duties – keeping you informed, helping organize local support networks, conducting surveys, advocating on your behalf to management and elected representatives, and coordinating with our partners in the North Alabama Area Labor Council (NAALC), the NASA Council of IFPTE Locals (NCIL), and the International Federation of Professional and Technical Engineers (IFPTE).








Windows 11 may nag you now when your Microsoft 365 subscription expires


We’re introducing a simple reminder that appears as a SCOOBE screen (Second Chance Out of Box Experience) to let you know your Microsoft subscription needs attention (for example, if a renewal payment didn’t go through). In just a few clicks, you can review and update your payment method and keep your subscription benefits uninterrupted.


Windows Blogs

Questa voce è stata modificata (2 giorni fa)

Technology Channel reshared this.



After Charlie Kirk's death, teachers and professors nationwide fired or disciplined over social media posts




Kash Patel's tenure as FBI director defined by misstep after misstep




Proton Mail Suspended Journalist Accounts at Request of Cybersecurity Agency


cross-posted from: ibbit.at/post/52938

The company behind the Proton Mail email service, Proton, describes itself as a “neutral and safe haven for your personal data, committed to defending your freedom.”

But last month, Proton disabled email accounts belonging to journalists reporting on security breaches of various South Korean government computer systems following a complaint by an unspecified cybersecurity agency. After a public outcry, and multiple weeks, the journalists’ accounts were eventually reinstated — but the reporters and editors involved still want answers on how and why Proton decided to shut down the accounts in the first place.

Martin Shelton, deputy director of digital security at the Freedom of the Press Foundation, highlighted that numerous newsrooms use Proton’s services as alternatives to something like Gmail “specifically to avoid situations like this,” pointing out that “While it’s good to see that Proton is reconsidering account suspensions, journalists are among the users who need these and similar tools most.” Newsrooms like The Intercept, the Boston Globe, and the Tampa Bay Times all rely on Proton Mail for emailed tip submissions.

Shelton noted that perhaps Proton should “prioritize responding to journalists about account suspensions privately, rather than when they go viral.”

On Reddit, Proton’s official account stated that “Proton did not knowingly block journalists’ email accounts” and that the “situation has unfortunately been blown out of proportion.” Proton did not respond to The Intercept’s request for comment.

The two journalists whose accounts were disabled were working on an article published in the August issue of the long-running hacker zine Phrack. The story described how a sophisticated hacking operation — what’s known in cybersecurity parlance as an APT, or advanced persistent threat — had wormed its way into a number of South Korean computer networks, including those of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and the military Defense Counterintelligence Command, or DCC.

The journalists, who published their story under the names Saber and cyb0rg, describe the hack as being consistent with the work of Kimsuky, a notorious North Korean state-backed APT sanctioned by the U.S. Treasury Department in 2023.

As they pieced the story together, emails viewed by The Intercept show that the authors followed cybersecurity best practices and conducted what’s known as responsible disclosure: notifying affected parties that a vulnerability has been discovered in their systems prior to publicizing the incident.

Saber and cyb0rg created a dedicated Proton Mail account to coordinate the responsible disclosures, then proceeded to notify the impacted parties, including the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and the DCC, and also notified South Korean cybersecurity organizations like the Korea Internet and Security Agency, and KrCERT/CC, the state-sponsored Computer Emergency Response Team. According to emails viewed by The Intercept, KrCERT wrote back to the authors, thanking them for their disclosure.

A note on cybersecurity jargon: CERTs are agencies consisting of cybersecurity experts specializing in dealing with and responding to security incidents. CERTs exist in over 70 countries — with some countries having multiple CERTs each specializing in a particular field such as the financial sector — and may be government-sponsored or private organizations. They adhere to a set of formal technical standards, such as being expected to react to reported cybersecurity threats and security incidents. A high-profile example of a CERT agency in the U.S. is the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Agency, which has recently been gutted by the Trump administration.

A week after the print issue of Phrack came out, and a few days before the digital version was released, Saber and cyb0rg found that the Proton account they had set up for the responsible disclosure notifications had been suspended. A day later, Saber discovered that his personal Proton Mail account had also been suspended. Phrack posted a timeline of the account suspensions at the top of the published article, and later highlighted the timeline in a viral social media post. Both accounts were suspended owing to an unspecified “potential policy violation,” according to screenshots of account login attempts reviewed by The Intercept.

The suspension notice instructed the authors to fill out Proton’s abuse appeals form if they believed the suspension was in error. Saber did so, and received a reply from a member of Proton Mail’s Abuse Team who went by the name Dante.

In an email viewed by The Intercept, Dante told Saber that their account “has been disabled as a result of a direct connection to an account that was taken down due to violations of our terms and conditions while being used in a malicious manner.” Dante also provided a link to Proton’s terms of service, going on to state, “We have clearly indicated that any account used for unauthorized activities, will be sanctioned accordingly.” The response concluded by stating, “We consider that allowing access to your account will cause further damage to our service, therefore we will keep the account suspended.”

On August 22, a Phrack editors reached out to Proton, writing that no hacked data was passed through the suspended email accounts, and asked if the account suspension incident could be deescalated. After receiving no response from Proton, the editor sent a follow-up email on September 6. Proton once again did not reply to the email.

On September 9, the official Phrack X account made a post asking Proton’s official account asking why Proton was “cancelling journalists and ghosting us,” adding: “need help calibrating your moral compass?” The post quickly went viral, garnering over 150,000 views.

Proton’s official account replied the following day, stating that Proton had been “alerted by a CERT that certain accounts were being misused by hackers in violation of Proton’s Terms of Service. This led to a cluster of accounts being disabled. Our team is now reviewing these cases individually to determine if any can be restored.” Proton then stated that they “stand with journalists” but “cannot see the content of accounts and therefore cannot always know when anti-abuse measures may inadvertently affect legitimate activism.”

Proton did not publicly specify which CERT had alerted them, and didn’t answer The Intercept’s request for the name of the specific CERT which had sent the alert. KrCERT also did not reply to The Intercept’s question about whether they were the CERT that had sent the alert to Proton.

[

Related

Proton Mail Says It’s “Politically Neutral” While Praising Republican Party](theintercept.com/2025/01/28/pr…)


Later in the day, Proton’s founder and CEO Andy Yen posted on X that the two accounts had been reinstated. Neither Yen nor Proton explained why the accounts had been reinstated, whether they had been found to not violate the terms of service after all, why had they been suspended in the first place, or why a member of the Proton Abuse Team reiterated that the accounts had violated the terms of service during Saber’s appeals process.

Phrack noted that the account suspensions created a “real impact to the author. The author was unable to answer media requests about the article.” The co-authors, Phrack pointed out, were also in the midst of the responsible disclosure process and working together with the various affected South Korean organizations to help fix their systems. “All this was denied and ruined by Proton,” Phrack stated.

Phrack editors said that the incident leaves them “concerned what this means to other whistleblowers or journalists. The community needs assurance that Proton does not disable accounts unless Proton has a court order or the crime (or ToS violation) is apparent.”

The post Proton Mail Suspended Journalist Accounts at Request of Cybersecurity Agency appeared first on The Intercept.


From The Intercept via this RSS feed







Elon Musk is trying to silence Microsoft employees who criticize Charlie Kirk





Saturday, September 13, 2025


Poland, Ukraine to train downing drones on Polish territory -- Russian offensive in Sumy Oblast completely thwarted -- Key Russian oil hub suspends operations -- [vlog] Can Ukraine’s oil strikes shift Russia's war? ... and more

Share

The Kyiv Independent [unofficial]


This newsletter is brought to you by Medical Bridges.

Medical Supplies for Ukraine’s Hospitals. Partnering for global health equity.

Russia’s war against Ukraine


Firefighters work at the site of a Russian drone strike on Sept. 12, 2025 in Sumy, Ukraine. In the morning, Russia attacked the city with two drones. The strike destroyed a car repair shop. Rescuers pulled the body of a 65-year-old security guard from the rubble. (Yehor Kryvoruchko / Kordon.Media / Global Images Ukraine via Getty Images)

Ukraine-Russia peace talks on ‘pause,’ Kremlin says. When asked about the Ukraine-Russia talks, Kremlin spokesperson Dmitry Peskov replied that communication channels have been established and exist, but as of now, “it’s more accurate to say there is a pause” in dialogue.

US envoy Kellogg’s presence shields Kyiv ‘no worse than Patriots,’ Zelensky says, urges US aid. “Every time you are here, General, we can sleep a little more. We would like you to travel to all Ukrainian cities,” Zelensky said at the annual Yalta European Strategy meeting.

Prince Harry, Polish and UK foreign ministers arrive in Kyiv. Polish Foreign Minister Radoslaw Sikorski’s visit came days after the largest Russian drone incursion into Polish airspace during a mass strike on Ukraine, in what Polish officials describe as a “deliberately targeted” strike and provocation.

Your contribution helps keep the Kyiv Independent going. Become a member today.

Poland, Ukraine to train downing drones on Polish territory, Warsaw says. The Polish Defense Ministry clarified on Sept. 12 that Ukrainian and Polish specialists will practice the use of drones and anti-drone systems only on Polish territory.

Russian offensive in Sumy Oblast ‘completely thwarted,’ Zelensky says. “As of today, we can state that the Russian offensive operation on Sumy has been completely thwarted by our forces,” President Volodymyr Zelensky said on Sept. 12, citing front-line reports from Commander-in-chief Oleksandr Syrskyi.

Over 130,000 Russian soldiers killed in Ukraine identified by media investigation. The latest reported death toll includes 36,568 volunteers, 18,261 recruited prisoners, 14,797 mobilized troops, and 2,777 mercenaries.

Read our exclusives


Ukraine war latest: Key Russian oil hub suspends operations, SBU says

Security Service of Ukraine (SBU) drones struck Primorsk, Russia’s largest oil-loading port on the Baltic Sea, overnight on Sept. 12, a source in the agency told the Kyiv Independent. Fires broke out at one of the vessels and a pumping station, forcing the suspension of oil shipments.

Photo: Exilenova / Telegram

Learn more

KI Insights Ukraine calendar: What will happen this week

The Ukrainian government is expected to soon submit its Government Action Program, presented in August, to Parliament for approval. The program is seen as an effort to boost the popularity of the new government following the July reshuffle.

Photo: Aleksander Kalka/NurPhoto via Getty Images

Learn more

From Crimea to Donbas, Russia’s “peace” has always meant more war. We’re here in Ukraine to give the world a reality check. Support independent journalism in this critical moment.

BECOME A MEMBER

MAKE A DONATION

Human cost of Russia’s war


Russian attacks kill 6, injure 26 in Ukraine over past day. Ukrainian forces downed 33 out of the 40 drones, including Shahed-type attack drones, launched by Russia overnight, the Air Force reported. Six drones struck three different locations, according to the statement.

Can Ukraine’s oil strikes shift Russia’s war?

International response


NATO to launch ‘Eastern Sentry‘ in response to Russian drone attack on Poland. The Russian attack on Poland exposed serious holes in NATO’s air defenses.

US vows to defend ‘every inch‘ of NATO territory after Russian drone incursion into Poland. “The United States stands by our NATO allies in the face of these alarming airspace violations,” said acting U.S. Ambassador to the U.N. Dorothy Shea, addressing the 15-member Security Council.

‘I’m not gonna defend anybody‘ — Trump says days after Poland shoots down Russian drones. “I’m not gonna defend anybody but they were actually knocked down and they fell. But you should not be close to Poland anyway,” U.S. President Donald Trump said.

UK pledges $193 million in Ukraine aid, hits Russia with new sanctions. “Putin’s bombardment of Ukrainian civilians, his stalling and delaying in internationally-backed peace talks, and his blatant disregard for human life must end,” U.K. Foreign Secretary Yvette Cooper said.

EU renews Russia sanctions despite pushback from Hungary, Slovakia. The sanctions list includes Russian President Vladimir Putin, Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov, top military officials, lawmakers, oligarchs, propagandists, mercenaries, and individuals responsible for the abduction of Ukrainian children from occupied territories.

Poland sees no reason to sever diplomatic ties with Russia after drone attack, foreign minister says. Polish Foreign Minister Radoslaw Sikorski said Poland sees no reason to sever diplomatic ties with Russia, noting that it has already limited the activities of Russian diplomats in several regions.

Lithuania ready to close border with Belarus immediately if provoked, minister says. “If something happens — a drone, a provocation, or suspicious troop movements — we can do it,” Lithuanian Interior Minister Vladislav Kondratovic said.

Company news


Kyiv Independent wins Online Journalism Award for Innovation in Revenue Strategy. The Kyiv Independent has been awarded the Online Journalism Award for Innovation in Revenue Strategy for building a sustainable business model during wartime.

This newsletter is open for sponsorship. Boost your brand’s visibility by reaching thousands of engaged subscribers. Click here for more details.

Today’s Ukraine Daily was brought to you by Martin Fornusek, Kateryna Denisova,

Toma Istomina, Anna Fratsyvir, Olena Goncharova, and Abbey Fenbert.

If you’re enjoying this newsletter, consider joining our membership program. Start supporting independent journalism today.

Share

#russia #video #poland #us #humanrights #uk #hungary #NATO #eu #genocide #oligarchs #Innovation #ukrainian #Ukraine #drones #homes #Putin #blogs #warcrimes #Kellogg #Apartments #украина #BalticSea #Kyiv #warsaw #путин #Kremlin #Sanctions #UkraineRussia #PeaceTalks #Sumy #mercenaries #polish #ships #русский #PutinWarCrimes #airforce #CrimesAgainstHumanity #RussianWarCrimes #lawmakers #terrorists #houses #traitors #Slovakia #sbu #provocation #firefighters #fires #Bombardment #Киев #геноцид #russianterrorists #princeharry #propagandists #airdefense #Patriots #russianterrorism #wartime #RussianAggression #ukrainianchildren #Antidrone #occupiedterritories #KyivIndependent #trumpisarussianasset #sumyoblast #Ukraineaid #russiansanctions #Russiansoldiers #internationallawviolations #abductions #DroneWarfare #killingcivilians #residentialbuildings #DroneAttacks #russiandiplomats #thwarted #vlogs #Russianoffensive #russiansoldierskilled #humanlife #CiviliansTargeted #russiandronestrikes #ukrainiancivilians #ComradeKrasnov #attackdrones #mediainvestigation #ukrainiancities #civiliansAttacked #civiliansTortured #Военныепреступления #disregard #residentialAreas #Гражданские #нападавшиенапытку #Преступленияпротивчеловечности #Русскиесмерти #убитые #цивилийцы #droneincursion #airspaceViolations #PolishAirspace #russiandroneincursion #primorsk #easternsentry #downingDrones #GovernmentActionProgram #NATOTerritory #oilShipments #oilStrikes #OnlineJournalismAward #operationsSuspended #PolishDefenseMinistry #PolishTerritory #pumpingStations #RussianOilHub #suspendsOperations #YaltaEuropeanStrategy


'No way': Democratic donors balk at donating to Biden's presidential library