Fake news travels faster than truth on Twitter, and we can’t blame bots
People prefer spreading juicy lies over the truth, according to new research from MIT. Continue reading Fake news travels faster than truth on Twitter, and we can’t blame bots
Collaborate Disseminate
People prefer spreading juicy lies over the truth, according to new research from MIT. Continue reading Fake news travels faster than truth on Twitter, and we can’t blame bots
NBC News asked three sources to retrieve the evidence of foreign election meddling that Twitter deleted Continue reading Read the 200,000 Russian Troll tweets Twitter deleted
The plan came a day after a federal indictment describing a Russian conspiracy to interfere in the 2016 election. Continue reading Facebook to verify election ad buyers by snail mail
Gfycat is deploying AI to seek and destroy AI-generated porn—a good step, but we’re not out of the woods yet. Continue reading AI-Moderators Fighting AI-Generated Porn Is the Harbinger of the Fake News Apocalypse
Nope, there’s no upside-down thumb coming our way. Rather, It’s a Reddit-esque downvote option, and it’s a limited test. Continue reading Facebook is not testing a dislike button, except for the one it’s testing
One coalition member notes that with smartphones, for example, “they’ve got you for every waking moment”. Continue reading Early Google, Facebook employees band together to tame tech addiction
Peter Yuryevich Levashov, a 37-year-old Russian computer programmer thought to be one of the world’s most notorious spam kingpins, has been extradited to the United States to face federal hacking and spamming charges.
Levashov, who allegedly went by the hacker name “Peter Severa,” or “Peter of the North,” hails from St. Petersburg in northern Russia, but he was arrested last year while in Barcelona, Spain with his family.
Authorities have long suspected he is the cybercriminal behind the once powerful spam botnet known as Waledac (a.k.a. “Kelihos”), a now-defunct malware strain responsible for sending more than 1.5 billion spam, phishing and malware attacks each day. Continue reading Alleged Spam Kingpin ‘Severa’ Extradited to US
Peter Yuryevich Levashov, a 37-year-old Russian computer programmer thought to be one of the world’s most notorious spam kingpins, has been extradited to the United States to face federal hacking and spamming charges.
Levashov, who allegedly went by the hacker name “Peter Severa,” or “Peter of the North,” hails from St. Petersburg in northern Russia, but he was arrested last year while in Barcelona, Spain with his family.
Authorities have long suspected he is the cybercriminal behind the once powerful spam botnet known as Waledac (a.k.a. “Kelihos”), a now-defunct malware strain responsible for sending more than 1.5 billion spam, phishing and malware attacks each day. Continue reading Alleged Spam Kingpin ‘Severa’ Extradited to US
The faces of Daisy Ridley, Emma Watson, Gal Gadot and other celebrities have appeared near-seamlessly stitched onto porn videos using neural network tech. Continue reading AI fake porn could cast any of us
Facebook is giving users “transparency and control” over their data in preparation for the EU’s new General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) law Continue reading Facebook to give you more control over your data