Arts and EntertainmentCybersecurity

AI Security Crisis: Poisoned Documents Can Hijack Large Language Models With Minimal Effort

Security researchers have discovered that AI models can be compromised with as few as 250 poisoned documents containing hidden triggers. The study challenges previous assumptions about AI security, revealing that even massive models remain vulnerable to these sophisticated attacks that could limit artificial intelligence adoption in sensitive applications.

AI Security Breach: Minimal Poisoned Documents Create Major Vulnerabilities

Security researchers have uncovered a disturbing vulnerability in artificial intelligence systems, revealing that posting as few as 250 “poisoned” documents online can introduce dangerous backdoor vulnerabilities, according to reports from a joint study by the UK AI Security Institute, the Alan Turing Institute, and Anthropic.

Cybersecurity

Massachusetts Hacker Sentenced: PowerSchool Data Breach Exposed 70 Million Students and Teachers

** A 20-year-old Massachusetts man has been sentenced to four years in prison for hacking education software provider PowerSchool and extorting the company. The breach exposed sensitive data of millions nationwide, leading to a multi-million dollar restitution order. **CONTENT:**

A Massachusetts man has been handed a four-year prison sentence for his role in a high-profile cyberattack that compromised the data of millions of students and teachers through the education software provider PowerSchool. Matthew Lane, 20, exploited security vulnerabilities to access sensitive information and demand ransom payments, highlighting growing concerns in cybersecurity and data protection.

CybersecurityTelecom

Satellite Security Breach: Unencrypted T-Mobile and Military Data Exposed, Study Shows

A groundbreaking study presented at the Annual Computer Security Applications Conference exposes how unencrypted satellite transmissions from providers including T-Mobile are vulnerable to interception. Researchers found sensitive military communications, corporate data, and private citizen calls flowing openly through satellite networks.

Widespread Satellite Security Vulnerabilities Exposed

Groundbreaking research presented this week at the Annual Computer Security Applications Conference has revealed alarming security gaps in satellite internet services used by major providers including T-Mobile. The study demonstrates that unencrypted transmissions containing sensitive military communications, corporate data, and private citizen calls and texts can be intercepted using relatively inexpensive equipment. As first reported by Wired magazine, this vulnerability exposes fundamental security weaknesses in how satellite providers handle sensitive information.

CybersecurityGovernment

Army National Guard Cyber Defense Initiative: Protecting Cities from Hackers

The Army National Guard is deploying specialized cyber units to protect cities from hackers targeting critical infrastructure. This initiative comes as US cities face increasing cyberattacks on municipal systems, utilities, and public services.

The Army National Guard is mobilizing specialized cyber defense teams to protect American cities from hackers targeting critical infrastructure systems. This new initiative represents a significant escalation in the military’s role in domestic cybersecurity as municipalities struggle to defend against sophisticated digital attacks.

National Guard Cyber Defense Program Launch

CybersecurityPolicy

UK Fines 4Chan £20,000 for Online Safety Act Compliance Failures

The UK has fined 4Chan £20,000 for failing to comply with Online Safety Act investigations. Ofcom issued the penalty after the social media platform ignored legally-binding information requests about revenue and illegal content risks.

UK regulator imposes significant 4Chan fine

The United Kingdom has imposed a £20,000 (approximately $26,000) fine against 4Chan for compliance failures under the Online Safety Act. UK telecoms regulator Ofcom announced the penalty after the controversial platform repeatedly ignored legally-binding information requests concerning its global revenue and illegal content risk assessment procedures.