Frankreich intensiviert Ermittlungen: Telegram-Gründer Pawel Durow kommt unter Auflagen frei

Dem Telegram-Gründer Pawel Durow drohen bis zu zehn Jahre Haft und eine Geldstrafe von 500.000 Euro. Die Kaution wurde auf fünf Millionen Euro festgesetzt. (Telegram, Instant Messenger)

Dem Telegram-Gründer Pawel Durow drohen bis zu zehn Jahre Haft und eine Geldstrafe von 500.000 Euro. Die Kaution wurde auf fünf Millionen Euro festgesetzt. (Telegram, Instant Messenger)

Forschung: Der Mond soll doch einen festen Kern haben

Der innere Mondkern soll etwa 500 Kilometer im Durchmesser betragen und fest sein. Eine neue Studie stützt damit frühere Forschungsergebnisse. (Mond, Raumfahrt)

Der innere Mondkern soll etwa 500 Kilometer im Durchmesser betragen und fest sein. Eine neue Studie stützt damit frühere Forschungsergebnisse. (Mond, Raumfahrt)

Anzeige: Analyse großer Datenmengen mit dem Elastic Stack

Der Elastic Stack ist ein mächtiges Werkzeug, um aus großen Datenmengen entscheidende Erkenntnisse zu gewinnen. Die Golem Karrierewelt bietet eine detaillierte Einführung in seine Komponenten. (Golem Karrierewelt, Server-Applikationen)

Der Elastic Stack ist ein mächtiges Werkzeug, um aus großen Datenmengen entscheidende Erkenntnisse zu gewinnen. Die Golem Karrierewelt bietet eine detaillierte Einführung in seine Komponenten. (Golem Karrierewelt, Server-Applikationen)

Telegram CEO charged with numerous crimes and is banned from leaving France

Multi-billionaire must post bail of 5 million euros, report to police twice a week.

Telegram CEO Pavel Durov sitting on stage and speaking at a conference.

Enlarge / Pavel Durov, CEO and co-founder of Telegram, speaks at TechCrunch Disrupt SF 2015 on September 21, 2015, in San Francisco. (credit: Getty Images | tSteve Jennings)

Telegram CEO Pavel Durov was indicted in France today and ordered to post bail of 5 million euros. The multi-billionaire was forbidden from leaving the country and must report to police twice a week while the case continues.

Charges were detailed in a statement issued today by Paris prosecutor Laure Beccuau, which was provided to Ars. They are nearly identical to the possible charges released by Beccuau on Monday.

The first charge listed is complicity in "web-mastering an online platform in order to enable an illegal transaction in organized group." Today's press release said this charge carries a maximum penalty of 10 years in prison and a 500,000-euro fine.

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Unpatchable 0-day in surveillance cam is being exploited to install Mirai

Vulnerability is easy to exploit and allows attackers to remotely execute commands.

The word ZERO-DAY is hidden amidst a screen filled with ones and zeroes.

Enlarge (credit: Getty Images)

Malicious hackers are exploiting a critical vulnerability in a widely used security camera to spread Mirai, a family of malware that wrangles infected Internet of Things devices into large networks for use in attacks that take down websites and other Internet-connected devices.

The attacks target the AVM1203, a surveillance device from Taiwan-based manufacturer AVTECH, network security provider Akamai said Wednesday. Unknown attackers have been exploiting a 5-year-old vulnerability since March. The zero-day vulnerability, tracked as CVE-2024-7029, is easy to exploit and allows attackers to execute malicious code. The AVM1203 is no longer sold or supported, so no update is available to fix the critical zero-day.

That time a ragtag army shook the Internet

Akamai said that the attackers are exploiting the vulnerability so they can install a variant of Mirai, which arrived in September 2016 when a botnet of infected devices took down cybersecurity news site Krebs on Security. Mirai contained functionality that allowed a ragtag army of compromised webcams, routers, and other types of IoT devices to wage distributed denial-of-service attacks of record-setting sizes. In the weeks that followed, the Mirai botnet delivered similar attacks on Internet service providers and other targets. One such attack, against dynamic domain name provider Dyn paralyzed vast swaths of the Internet.

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Five more dead in record-breaking outbreak linked to Boar’s Head meats

CDC implores consumers to check their fridges for the recalled meats.

Listeria monocytogenes.

Enlarge / Listeria monocytogenes. (credit: Getty | BSIP)

Five more people have died in a nationwide outbreak of Listeria infections linked to contaminated Boar's Head brand meats, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reported Wednesday.

To date, 57 people across 18 states have been sickened, all of whom required hospitalization. A total of eight have died. The latest tally makes this the largest listeriosis outbreak in the US since 2011, when cantaloupe processed in an unsanitary facility led to 147 Listeria infections in 28 states, causing 33 deaths, the CDC notes.

The new cases and deaths come after a massive recall of more than 7 million pounds of Boar's Head meat products, which encompassed 71 of the company's products. That recall was announced on July 30, which itself was an expansion of a July 26 recall of an additional 207,528 pounds of Boar's Head products. By August 8, when the CDC last provided an update on the outbreak, the number of cases had hit 43, with 43 hospitalizations and three deaths.

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Google AI reintroduces human image generation after historical accuracy outcry

Ars testing shows some historical prompts no longer generate artificially diverse scenes.

Google's Gemini AI model is once again able to generate images of humans after that function was "paused" in February following outcry over historically inaccurate racial depictions in many results.

In a blog post, Google said that its Imagen 3 model—which was first announced in May—will "start to roll out the generation of images of people" to Gemini Advanced, Business, and Enterprise users in the "coming days." But a version of that Imagen model—complete with human image-generation capabilities—was recently made available to the public via the Gemini Labs test environment without a paid subscription (though a Google account is needed to log in).

That new model comes with some safeguards to try to avoid the creation of controversial images, of course. Google writes in its announcement that it doesn't support "the generation of photorealistic, identifiable individuals, depictions of minors or excessively gory, violent or sexual scenes." In an FAQ, Google clarifies that the prohibition on "identifiable individuals" includes "certain queries that could lead to outputs of prominent people." In Ars' testing, that meant a query like "President Biden playing basketball" would be refused, while a more generic request for "a US president playing basketball" would generate multiple options.

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AI image-generation company Midjourney says it’s “getting into hardware”

It hired a hardware chief who previously worked on Apple Vision Pro.

A fantasy drawing of a wizard staring into a glowing orb

Responding to this meme image of a wizard with an orb from the I.C.E. book Middle-earth: Valar and Maiar, Midjourney's founder joked that the new hardware form factor might be an orb. (credit: I.C.E.)

Midjourney, a company best known for its robust AI image-generation tool, has publicly announced that it's "getting into hardware" and has invited job-seekers to apply to join its new hardware division.

The company shared the announcement on its official X account earlier today.

Midjourney founder David Holz previously worked at a hardware company; he was CTO of Leap Motion. A few months ago, he hired Ahmad Abbas, with whom he worked at Leap Motion. Abbas also worked at Apple for five years as a hardware manager working on the Vision Pro headset. His LinkedIn profile now lists his current title as "Head of Hardware, Midjourney."

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Court: Section 230 doesn’t shield TikTok from Blackout Challenge death suit

TikTok must face claim over For You Page recommending content that killed kids.

Court: Section 230 doesn’t shield TikTok from Blackout Challenge death suit

Enlarge (credit: Catherine McQueen | Moment)

An appeals court has revived a lawsuit against TikTok by reversing a lower court's ruling that Section 230 immunity shielded the short video app from liability after a child died taking part in a dangerous "Blackout Challenge."

Several kids died taking part in the “Blackout Challenge," which Third Circuit Judge Patty Shwartz described in her opinion as encouraging users "to choke themselves with belts, purse strings, or anything similar until passing out."

Because TikTok promoted the challenge in children's feeds, Tawainna Anderson counted among mourning parents who attempted to sue TikTok in 2022. Ultimately, she was told that TikTok was not responsible for recommending the video that caused the death of her daughter Nylah.

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