“Please someone help me.” FaceTime users bombarded with group call spam

Apple doesn’t provide tools that effectively ease a major headache for FaceTime users.

A middle-aged woman sitting in the kitchen at the glass table

Enlarge (credit: Getty Images)

FaceTime users are getting bombarded with group calls from numbers they’ve never seen before, often as many as 20 times in short succession during late hours of the night.

Griefers behind the pranks call as many as 31 numbers at a time. When a person receiving one of the calls hangs up, a different number will immediately call back. FaceTime doesn’t have the ability to accept only FaceTime calls coming from people in the user’s address book. It also requires all numbers in a group call must be manually blocked for the call to be stopped.

“I got my first facetime spam starting 4 days ago,” one user reported to an Apple support forum earlier this month. “It has been non-stop, over 300 numbers blocked so far. My 3 year old daughter has been accidentally answering them and going on video without a t-shirt on.”

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Report: Indian government is planning outright ban on cryptocurrency

The proposed bill would ban trading, mining, and even holding cryptocurrencies.

A man with a long white beard speaks into a microphone.

Enlarge / Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi. (credit: T. Narayan/Bloomberg via Getty Images)

The government of India is planning to introduce legislation banning cryptocurrency, Reuters reports. The law would impose fines on anyone who trades, mines, or even holds cryptocurrency. The government has a comfortable majority in parliament, giving the proposal a good shot at becoming law.

This would make India one of the most cryptocurrency-hostile jurisdictions in the world. China, for example, has imposed a number of restrictions on trading and mining cryptocurrency, but it hasn't banned ownership of cryptocurrencies outright.

The legal status of cryptocurrency has been a subject of controversy in India over the last few years. In 2018, India's central bank banned Indian banks from providing financial services to cryptocurrency exchanges, hampering the growth of the nation's cryptocurrency economy.

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PA woman charged with using deepfakes to harass teenage cheerleaders

Specifically using deepfakes isn’t against state law, but harassment sure is.

The manipulated images showed the cheerleaders holding much less innocent things than pompoms.

Enlarge / The manipulated images showed the cheerleaders holding much less innocent things than pompoms. (credit: Michael Moeller | EyeEm | Getty Images)

A woman in eastern Pennsylvania allegedly created a series of deepfake videos in a harassment and bullying campaign meant to intimidate teenage girls in competition with her daughter and get them kicked off a local cheerleading team.

Hilltown Township police earlier this month charged Raffaela Spone with three counts of cyber harassment of a child after she allegedly began harassing the teenagers last July, according to the Bucks County District Attorney Matthew Weintraub.

The girls received voice and text messages saying, "You should kill yourself," followed by doctored videos taken from images on their social media profiles and altered to make them appear nude, vaping, or drinking. The altered images included captions reading, "toxic traits, revenge, dating boys, and smoking" and "was drinking at the shore, smokes pot, and uses 'attentionwh0re69' as a screen name." The images and videos were also sent to coaches for the team, seemingly in an attempt to have the girls removed from the team.

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AMD’s Epyc Milan offers double Intel Xeon’s datacenter performance

It’s hard to overstate how badly AMD is shaming Intel in the data center lately.

Whether your primary ask is higher performance per watt, per physical rack unit, or per TCO dollar, AMD's Epyc Milan is an extremely strong contender.

Enlarge / Whether your primary ask is higher performance per watt, per physical rack unit, or per TCO dollar, AMD's Epyc Milan is an extremely strong contender. (credit: AMD / Tim Dorr / Jim Salter)

Today, AMD launched Epyc Milan, the server / data center implementation of its Zen 3 architecture. The story for Epyc Milan is largely the same told by Ryzen 5000—lots of cores, high boost-clock rates, 19 percent gen-on-gen uplift, and an awful lot of polite schadenfreude at rival Intel's expense.

The comparison between AMD and Intel is even more stark in the server room than it was in consumer PCs and workstations, because there's no "but single thread" to fall back on here. Intel clung to a single-threaded performance lead over AMD for some time even after AMD began dominating in multithreaded performance. Although that lead disappeared in 2020, Intel could at least still point to near-equivalent single-threaded performance and pooh-pooh the relevance of the all-threaded performance it was getting crushed on.

This isn't an excuse you can make in the data center—Epyc and Xeon Scalable are both aimed squarely at massively multitenanted, all-threads workloads, and Xeon Scalable just can't keep up.

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Volkswagen Group wants six new European battery factories by 2030

It’s moving to a single prismatic cell design in 2023 to drive down costs.

A man in an open-collared suit stands in front of a large power charger mockup.

Enlarge / Thomas Schmall, Member of the Board of Management of Volkswagen Group for Technology, and CEO of Volkswagen Group Components. (credit: Volkswagen AG)

Volkswagen Group is planning six new European lithium-ion battery factories with a total yearly output of 240 GWh once they're all operational in 2030. It made the announcement on Monday at an online "Power Day" event, where it laid out the latest update to its electrification plan. In addition to the new factories, it will be moving to a common prismatic cell design in 2023 to drive down battery costs and is upping its investment in DC fast-charging infrastructure.

"E-mobility has become core business for us. We are now systematically integrating additional stages in the value chain. We secure a long-term pole position in the race for the best battery and best customer experience in the age of zero emission mobility," said VW Group chairman Herbert Diess.

Some of battery factories will be owned by VW Group, like the one in Salzgitter, Germany, that in 2025 will start churning out a single design of prismatic cells for high-volume EVs built on VW Group's MEB platform. Others will be operated by suppliers; on Monday, Northvolt and VW Group signed a $14 billion order for battery cells for premium EVs, which Northvolt will begin producing in 2023 at its factory in Skellefteå, Sweden. Both factories will reach annual capacities of 40 GWh by 2030. (VW is also increasing its ownership stake in Northvolt, and Northvolt will sell its share of the Salzgitter factory to VW Group.)

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Lilbits Leaks: Walmart’s Android TV stick, Qualcomm’s next-mid-range laptop CPU, Samsung’s Galaxy A phones

Walmart’s working on a media streamer powered by Google’s Android TV software. The company hasn’t actually announced the new product yet, but an FCC listing spilled the beans. Meanwhile Evan Blass has spilled the beans on Samsung&#82…

Walmart’s working on a media streamer powered by Google’s Android TV software. The company hasn’t actually announced the new product yet, but an FCC listing spilled the beans. Meanwhile Evan Blass has spilled the beans on Samsung’s upcoming Galaxy A72 smartphone, Windows Future has spilled a few beans about Qualcomm’s next-gen Snapdragon processor for mid-range […]

The post Lilbits Leaks: Walmart’s Android TV stick, Qualcomm’s next-mid-range laptop CPU, Samsung’s Galaxy A phones appeared first on Liliputing.

Marvel drops one last trailer for The Falcon and the Winter Soldier

“Symbols are nothing without the men and women that give them meaning.”

Marvel’s The Falcon and the Winter Soldier debuts this Friday on Disney+.

With WandaVision now in the rearview mirror, Marvel fans have turned their attention to the imminent premiere of The Falcon and the Winter Soldier this Friday. Anthony Mackie and Sebastian Stan reprise their roles as Sam Wilson (the Falcon) and Bucky Barnes (the Winter Soldier) for a series set after the events of Avengers: Endgame.

As we've reported previously, after the Avengers and their many allies finally defeated Thanos in Endgame, Steve Rogers/Captain America (Chris Evans) handed over his shield to Sam so he could take on the mantle. But will Sam accept it? That's a big part of what The Falcon and the Winter Soldier will explore over the course of its six episodes, and showrunner Malcolm Spellman has said the tone will be similar to Captain America: The Winter Soldier.

Sam and Bucky will "team up on a global adventure that tests their abilities—and their patience." The primary villain will be Baron Helmut Zemo, a Sokovian colonel-turned-terrorist who is obsessed with defeating the Avengers, with Daniel Brühl reprising the role from Captain America: Civil War. Director Kari Skogland has said that his appearance in the series shows him "paying for his crimes" and "in a very sad place."

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Daily Deals (3-15-2021)

Music streaming service Deezer is offering 3-month trials of its Deezer Premium, HiFi, or Family subscription services. After the free trial you can either cancel or pay $10 per month for Deezer Premium or $15 per month for either of the other tiers. …

Music streaming service Deezer is offering 3-month trials of its Deezer Premium, HiFi, or Family subscription services. After the free trial you can either cancel or pay $10 per month for Deezer Premium or $15 per month for either of the other tiers. Both tiers offer ad-free music streaming with unlimited skips, support for downloading […]

The post Daily Deals (3-15-2021) appeared first on Liliputing.

US claims seller of encrypted phones violated racketeering and drug laws

US: Company put “sophisticated encryption” on phones sold to drug traffickers.

A man's hand on a smartphone with a screen displaying a lock symbol.

Enlarge (credit: Getty Images | Tevarak Phanduang | EyeEm)

A US grand jury has indicted the CEO of a Canadian company that sells encrypted phones, alleging that he and an associate violated racketeering and drug laws. On Friday, the federal grand jury "returned an indictment against the Chief Executive Officer and an associate of the Canada-based firm Sky Global on charges that they knowingly and intentionally participated in a criminal enterprise that facilitated the transnational importation and distribution of narcotics through the sale and service of encrypted communications devices," the Department of Justice said in a press release.

Sky Global CEO Jean-Francois Eap and Thomas Herdman, a former distributor of Sky Global devices, were charged with a conspiracy to violate the Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act (RICO), a law designed to punish organized crime. They were also charged with a conspiracy to distribute illegal drugs and aiding and abetting. The racketeering and drug counts each carry maximum penalties of life in prison, the DOJ said. The US is seeking criminal convictions and forfeiture of "at least $100,000,000" worth of assets.

The indictment is available in this Motherboard article.

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Mobdro: Luminati Proxy Service “Suspended Service” To Pirate App

Last week law enforcement agencies in Europe shut down Mobdro, now described as the world’s largest pirate IPTV app. At least in part, Mobdro raised revenue by giving its users the option to have their devices join the Luminati proxy network. According to Luminati’s CEO, the company was completely unaware of the investigation.

From: TF, for the latest news on copyright battles, piracy and more.

MobdroLast Tuesday, the European Union Agency for Criminal Justice Cooperation (Eurojust) reported that police had made one arrest and detained three people for questioning in connection with the pirate streaming app Mobdro.

As one of the newer breeds of standalone piracy apps, Mobdro offered live TV, sports channels and 24/7 content presented in an easy-to-use interface.

Over the years Mobdro’s popularity sky-rocketed although there appears to be a disagreement among law enforcement agencies on the exact number of users.

On March 10, Eurojust said that 43 million users had downloaded the app yet a day later, Europol more than doubled that estimate to 100 million users. Either way, Mobdro was huge and in a developing case, there is more to report.

Europol now says that after three house searches (two in Spain, one in Andorra) four people were arrested and 20 domains were blocked under the authority of four court orders. In addition, bank accounts containing unspecified sums of money were frozen.

Mobdro Revenue Generation

One thing that both Eurojust and Europol agree on is the amount of money believed to have been generated by Mobdro. According to both agencies, the people behind the app made more than €5 million in illegal profits. Eurojust doesn’t say where that revenue came from but Europol is prepared to offer more detail.

“The Spanish company behind the illegal activity earned its profits through advertisements,” Europol confirms.

While any number of advertising companies could have been working with Mobdro, that wasn’t the only way the app generated income. As reported in April 2019, Mobdro was criticized in a security study for including a system that made it possible for a “threat actor” to log in to a user’s device and then navigate away from the device to the Internet, effectively posing as the user online.

While this sounds scary, this was actually a ‘feature’ that Mobdro users opted into, to avoid seeing any advertising in the app. Users who made that choice found themselves being asked to consent to a EULA before their idle devices could be utilized by the Luminati proxy network. From there on in, their IP addresses and bandwidth could be used by others, as per the agreement.

Europol doesn’t mention Luminati by name but the use of certain terminology piqued our interest.

“Through the computer infrastructure and power, [the operators of Mobdro] were able to sell user information to a company related to botnet and DDoS attacks,” Europol explains.

Given that an industry-funded study had already highlighted that Mobdro used Luminati, and that earlier reports indicated that Luminati’s network had been illegally used to launch a DDoS attack, it seems likely that Europol is talking about Luminati.

The big questions, then, are whether Luminati appreciates this characterization and whether it is now part of the criminal investigation into Mobdro.

Luminati Was “Not Aware” Of Mobdro Investigation

“Luminati is not currently and has not been in any way involved in the law enforcement investigation against Mobdro. In fact, we were not aware of the reported investigation until recent press coverage,” Luminati CEO Or Lenchner informs TorrentFreak.

“We have zero tolerance to illegal activities. When it came to our attention that Mobdro (a publisher which was using our commercial SDK) had been subject to a law enforcement investigation for alleged copyright infringement, we suspended their right to use our SDK.”

It’s not clear how many of Mobdro’s users (Eurojust says 43 million, Europol 100 million) chose to remove ads and join Luminati but even just a small percentage would’ve added significant numbers of IP addresses to the Isreal-based company’s network.

According to Lenchner, this would not be connected to illegal activity. Luminati provides services to Fortune 500, academic, and public sector organizations for entirely legal end-uses.

“Luminati’s SDK is in no way connected to the alleged copyright infringement, as should be the case for any other SDKs that Mobdro was using,” he explains.

“App publishers offer their customers to join the Luminati proxy network in return for using their app without advertising, thus enabling them to have a better user experience.

“Publishers choose Luminati because an improved user experience leads to increased engagement. Enterprises use Luminati’s proxy network to collect open/public information on the Web such as product pricing, for ad verification and for fraud prevention.”

Lenchner says that any users who opted to join the Luminati proxy network are protected by a “stringent and compliant KYC (Know Your Customer) process.” Luminati’s CEO says no data is collected about these users and their connections were only used for “pre-approved business/use cases.”

In the event that any users of Mobdro clicked the EULA without reading it, they are able to review what their connections could have been used for here.

From: TF, for the latest news on copyright battles, piracy and more.