Notícias
Conteúdo Abusivo
9 de janeiro de 2026
A practical Technical Security playbook oriented toward lawful, peaceful protest in the United States.
Designed to reduce avoidable risk from surveillance, device seizure, data exposure, doxxing, and opportunistic violence, without advising wrongdoing or evasion of lawful processes. This is not legal advice. Introduction Public protest has always carried risk. What has changed in recent years is the density and permanence of that risk. Surveillance is no longer exceptional or […]
3 de janeiro de 2026
French authorities investigate AI 'undressing' deepfakes on X
France will probe AI-generated sexual deepfakes made with Grok on X after hundreds of women and teens reported “undressed” images shared online. French authorities will investigate AI-generated sexually explicit deepfakes created with Grok on X after hundreds of women and teens reported manipulated “undressed” images shared on social media. Grok is an artificial intelligence chatbot […]
17 de dezembro de 2025
New research confirms what we suspected: every LLM tested can be exploited
Just finished reading ActiveFence's emerging threats assessment on 7 major models across hate speech, disinfo, fraud, and CSAM-adjacent prompts. Key findings are: 44% of outputs were rated risky, 68% of unsafe ones were hate-speech-related, and only a single model landed in the safe range. What really jumps out is how different vendors behave per abuse area (fraud looks relatively well-covered, hate and child safety really don't). For those doing your own evals/red teaming: are you seeing similar per-category gaps? Has anyone brought in an external research partner like ActiveFence to track emerging threats over time? submitted by /u/CortexVortex1 [link] [comments]
13 de novembro de 2025
How 43,000 NPM Spam Packages Hid in Plain Sight for Two Years
A two-year campaign quietly flooded npm with 43,000 dormant packages, exposing major supply-chain security gaps. The post How 43,000 NPM Spam Packages Hid in Plain Sight for Two Years appeared first on eSecurity Planet.
13 de novembro de 2025
Fake spam filter alerts are hitting inboxes
A new phishing campaign is attempting to trick users into believing they've missed important emails, security researchers are warning. The emails The bogus email alerts look like they are coming from the recipient's email domain, and falsely claim that due to a “Secure Message system” upgrade, important messages have been blocked. To “release” (view) the emails, recipients are instructed to click on the “Move To Inbox” button/link and, if they do, they are taken to … More → The post Fake spam filter alerts are hitting inboxes appeared first on Help Net Security.
