Lastly, we celebrated the rich history of vanity license plates backfiring , and the decidedly less amusing future of cyberwar .
And there's more! Every Saturday we round up the security and privacy stories that we didn’t break or report on in-depth but which we think you should know about nonetheless. Click on the headlines to read them, and stay safe out there.
Employees at a Nuclear Power Plant Mined Cryptocurrency on the Job
Cryptojackers—the hackers who insert themselves into networks to mine cryptocurrency—have targeted critical infrastructure before . But this time, the mining was coming from inside the building. Employees at the South Ukraine Nuclear Power Plant reportedly hooked up their mining rigs to the plant's internal network. The bad news is that they exposed the plant to the broader internet, which is understandably not ideal for high-security nuclear plants. The good news, or at least less-bad news, is that the accused staff apparently hit the administrative offices, rather than the plant's industrial network. Either way, looking forward to a Simpsons episode about this sometime in 2025.Feds Indict 80 Scammers in Sprawling Phishing Indictment
We've written plenty about the perpetual effectiveness of Nigerian email scammers . But if you need any more proof, look no further than this 145-page indictment, in which the Department of Justice chronicles dozens of sophisticated cases, allegedly committed by 80 individuals, that stole tens of millions of dollars from companies and individual victims alike. It's unclear whether any of the culprits will face extradition, but at the very least it underscores the scope of a decades-old problem that, if anything, only continues to get worse.Human Contractors Listened to Xbox Audio Snippets, Too
At this point, it's hard to think of a voice platform that hasn't gotten in trouble for sending conversational snippets to human contractors to transcribe. Add Microsoft's Xbox to that list. A report this week from Motherboard details how Kinect audio commands were sent to third-party contractors as far back as 2014.How a Bail Bondsman Tricked Cell Companies Into Giving Location Data
The ongoing location data fiasco —carriers have been selling it to third parties without much concern for who ended up with it—was never good, per se, but the Daily Beast has a wild story about just how bad it gets. A bail bondsman allegedly invented a suicide prevention group called the Colorado Public Safety Task Force out of whole cloth to trick phone companies into giving him detailed location information for his targets. And it only gets worse from there.- How the nerds are reinventing pop culture
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- #Microsoft
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