Le Journal

X copies Bluesky’s homework and launches Starterpacks

How to change the Endministrator's identity in Arknights: Endfield

Game Freak's Beast of Reincarnation gets new gameplay, release window
A segment during the Xbox Developer Direct presentation taught players more about upcoming Game Freak RPG Beast of Reincarnation.

Hyperkin's new Infinakore Fender Telecaster guitar controller is a 3D-printing dream come true

Spotify brings AI-powered Prompted Playlists to the US and Canada

Domain spoofing used in 90 percent of top phishing attacks
Phishing emails containing company names see the highest click rates, while domain spoofing appears in nearly 90 percent of top-clicked attacks according to the latest Phishing Simulation Roundup from KnowBe4. The report shows that personalization significantly increases click rates, with the two most-clicked subject lines containing recipients’ company names. Internal topics dominated engagement, appearing in 100 percent of the top 10 most-clicked subject lines, while HR-related topics were referenced in 46 percent. Messages posing as IT notifications, training updates and routine HR communications consistently rank among the most effective phishing lures. Analysis of phishing delivery methods further reinforces these trends.… [Continue Reading]

1Password introduces built-in phishing protection
Phishing attacks come from all kinds of angles and AI is making them harder than ever to spot as you can no longer rely on the old giveaways like poor grammar. What’s more it only needs a momentary lapse of judgment to fall victim and give away key details. This is why password management company 1Password is beginning the rollout of a phishing prevention feature to act as that second pair of eyes and stop users before they share their passwords with scammers. !Password research finds that 89 percent of Americans have encountered a phishing scam, and 61 percent have… [Continue Reading]

Artists and writers push back on AI training with 'Stealing Isn’t Innovation' campaign
A new “Stealing Isn't Innovation” campaign has been launched in the United States that challenges how generative AI systems are trained on copyrighted material with neither permission nor payment. The effort from Human Artistry Campaign brings together U.S. creators who argue that current AI development practices are harming creative work, jobs, and long-term economic incentives. The campaign focuses on the widespread use of copyrighted books, music, films, journalism, and other creative works to train generative AI platforms. The campaign's organizers say large technology companies have copied vast amounts of content without authorization, shifting the cost of AI development onto creators… [Continue Reading]

One in ten UK businesses say a major cyber attack could shut them down

Americans are increasingly turning to VPNs to avoid government surveillance online

AdGuard's TrustTunnel VPN protocol avoids detection by mimicking normal web traffic

