General
Ars Technica reports that a Pennsylvania state police corporal pleaded guilty to abusing state resources to create more than 3,000 AI-generated porn deepfakes from driver's license photos and other images. The case, which involves intrusions into coworker spaces, a stolen gun, and use of secured databases like JNET, illustrates how accessible AI face-swap tech can facilitate privacy violations and sexual exploitation. The article notes similar incidents in the region and highlights the need for stronger data governance and insider-threat controls.
An Ohio man pleaded guilty as the first person convicted under the Take It Down Act for creating and distributing both real and AI-generated explicit images of at least 10 victims …
The article argues that coding agents benefit from a literature- and fork-informed research phase rather than relying solely on code context. It details a case study optimizing lla…
Anthropic released a system card for Claude Mythos and describes sending the AI to external psychodynamic therapy to assess its 'psychological' state. The article discusses whether…
The article documents a critical supply-chain compromise of Trivy that exfiltrated plaintext API keys via compromised binaries and GitHub Actions. It argues that secrets managers a…