Wednesday, March 25, 2026

US, UK, and Canada team up to fight crypto romance fraud; Operation Atlantic

New Research: Think Tank Funding Tracker Provides Insight into Cheerleading of Iran War


How our everyday devices became police informants by default

IEEE Spectrum “Every time you unlock your smartphone or start your connected car, you are generating a trail of digital evidence that can be used to track your every move. In Your Data Will Be Used Against You: Policing in the Age of Self-Surveillance, just published by NYU Press, law professor Andrew Guthrie Ferguson exposes how the Internet of Things has quietly transformed into a vast surveillance network, turning our most personal devices into digital informants. The following excerpt explores the concept of “sensorveillance,” detailing the specific mechanisms—such as Google’s Sensorvault, geofence warrants, and vehicle telemetry—that allow law enforcement to repurpose consumer technology into powerful tools for investigation and control.”


How to Stop Social Media Platforms From Tracking You When You Share Posts

Lifehacker: “When you hit the share button on social media apps such as Instagram, Facebook, or Threads, these sites tack on a tracker to the link you’re sharing. 

This tracker means that Instagram can tell who you’ve shared the link with, and it likely uses this information to further optimize its algorithm for ads. While the tech here is sneaky, it is easy to remove tracking information from these links….”

See also URL Clean – URLs copied from Google search results (such as links to PDFs) are more complicated than they need to be. This tool removes the unnecessary parts, leaving the page’s original URL.

Consumer Federation of America issues new report stating that US consumers actually lose $119 billion to online frauds every year

 
San Francisco: Adobe to pay $150 million to settle charges for undisclosed subscription fees and difficulty canceling; $75 million penalty and $75 in discounts for customers
 
US, UK, and Canada team up to fight crypto romance fraud; Operation Atlantic

New Interpol threat assessment finds in part that AI supported frauds are 4.5 times more profitable
 
White House announces task force to target federal benefit fraud; Vice President to chair; FTC Chairman vice chair
 
Interpol releases global fraud report; increasing use of AI; crime in Africa funds terrorism; scam centers spread globally
 

Fraud Studies: Here are links to the studies I’ve written for the Better Business Bureau: puppy fraudromance fraud; BEC fraudsweepstakes/lottery fraud,  tech support fraudromance fraud money mulescrooked movers, government impostersonline vehicle sale scamsrental fraud, gift cards,  free trial offer frauds,  job scams,  online shopping fraud,  fake check fraud and crypto scams
 
Fraud News Around the worldHumorFTC and CFPBArtificial Intelligence and deep fake fraudBenefit TheftScam CompoundsBusiness Email compromise fraud IRS and tax fraudBitcoin and Crypto FraudRansomware and data breachesJamaica and Lottery FraudRomance Fraud and Sextortion People

The DOJ has been taking down Epstein files. Here’s what remains

 Pope questioning Elon Musk's massive wealth, saying, "If that is the only thing that has value anymore, then we're in big trouble."



Channel Surfer is “a retro TV guide that turns YouTube into live cable

How does the schedule work? – Videos loop on a fixed daily schedule based on wall-clock time. Everyone watching the same channel sees the same video at the same moment.
Can I add my own channels? Yes! Use the bookmarklet on any YouTube playlist or channel page, then paste the JSON into the Import panel. Press I or click + Import.
Why won’t a video play? Some videos might be blocked in your region. Working on a fix.
Can you add a certain channel? Get in touch and suggest away! (No guarantee it will get added.)

Quick Facts

  • Launched March 2026
  • 40 channels covering music, tech, cooking, retro, and more
  • Deterministic schedule — no algorithm, no recommendations
  • Users can import their own YouTube subscriptions as channels
  • Free, no account required

The DOJ has been taking down Epstein files. Here’s what remains

CBS News: “The massive tranche of files the Justice Department currently maintains is more than 65,000 pages shorter than what the agency initially released. After removing tens of thousands of files, the Department of Justice currently makes public about 2.7 million pages of documents related to Jeffrey Epstein, a CBS News analysis found, a number below the Department’s initial claim of 3 million, and a total that continues to fluctuate. 

The Justice Department initially said that its release, made in response to a law passed by Congress compelling the agency to disclose nearly all files related to Epstein, comprised more than 3 million pages. Combined with previously released materials, the Department put the total at 3.5 million pages. And now, in part in response to widespread criticism and concernfrom survivors and their attorneys that the files contain nearly 100 survivors’ personal information and photos, the DOJ has scrambled to remove documents. 

A CBS News analysis found that as of late February, the Justice Department has taken down more than 47,000 files comprising about 65,500 pages. Links to those files now return a “page not found” error on the department’s website. Some of those removed documents contained explicit images or survivor information — including one document with unredacted photos of 21 survivors along with most of their birthdates. 

But the reasons for other files’ removal is unclear, such as a call log with all names redacted and images of Epstein’s jail bunk where investigators say he hanged himself. The Justice Department appears to be putting some removed files back up. Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche said the department reviewed 6 million total pages, meaning what it initially released constitutes less than half of the total. He said the DOJ withheld files to protect survivors and ongoing investigations, but lawmakers, who have access to the unredacted trove, have criticized the redactions, arguing that some protect powerful men instead of survivors.

 In response to inquiries from CBS News, Department of Justice spokesperson Natalie Baldassarre said that “CBS’s analysis appears to be fundamentally flawed” and that the department has “not deleted any files from the library.” But she also wrote that more than 47,000 files remain offline for further review, a file-count similar to what CBS News found had been removed. She added that the files will be ready for re-production by the end of the week…”

Otec - An annual Festival of Czech and Slovak Films


(While  Ocet means Vinegar )




6:30 PM ENJOY A FREE BECHEROVKA COCKTAIL ON ARRIVAL  

FATHER / Otec 

2025 SK, CZ, PL | Drama | 102 min


Awards: BBest Film Winner at Stockholm FF, Best International Feature Film Winner at Zurich FF

Festivals: Camerimage, Stockholm FF, Venice FF, Warsaw IFF, Zurich FF, Vancouver IFF, Reykjavík IFF

Father is a stark psychological drama centred on a mistake shattering the life of a devoted father, shaking his marriage and isolating him in guilt. When he and his wife come to see that this was not a personal failure, but something rooted deep in the architecture of the human mind, a fragile path toward forgiveness begins to emerge. Even with this understanding, the question remains: can love survive what no heart was built to endure?


Director Tereza Nvotová approaches the story with restraint, allowing unease to build through silence and observation. 


The film offers a penetrating look at the cost of emotional repression, questioning traditional notions of strength and responsibility. It is a deeply human portrait of loss, responsibility and vulnerability, presenting grief as a long and uncertain process rather than a journey with clear stages.


Father follows the life of a man after he experiences forgotten baby syndrome, unintentionally leaving his infant daughter in the back seat of his car.


In scene after scene, he is reminded that he will forever be “that guy from Nitra,” and he will never be able to escape the tragedy that resulted from his own negligence. (Memories of army days)


SHORT FILM: HOW TO LISTEN TO FOUNTAINS / Ako počúvať fontány | 2025 SK | Documentary | 10:01 | Dir: Eva Sajanová



Awards: Best Film Winner, Best Actor & Best Cinematography Feature Film Winner, Best Make-up Winner

Festivals: Camerimage FF, Polish FF, San Sebastián IFF



‘Franz’ is an intimate biographical drama that offers a human portrait of writer Franz Kafka, focusing on the man behind the literary legacy. Rather than following a traditional biopic structure, the film explores Kafka’s inner world, shaped by strained family relationships, insecurity and a persistent sense of alienation. Set in early 20th century Central Europe, the story places Kafka within a period marked by political tension and questions of identity, language and belonging. His struggles with authority, intimacy and self-expression unfold alongside his need to write, portrayed not as a path to recognition but as a fragile means of survival.


Director Agnieszka Holland approaches the subject with psychological depth and restraint, avoiding grand gestures in favour of nuance. The film presents Kafka not as a distant cultural icon, but as a deeply conflicted individual, inviting audiences to reconsider his life through a personal and emotionally grounded lens.


SHORT FILM: BETTER MAN / Lepší člověk | 2025 CZ | Animation | 6:05 | Dir: Eliška Jirásková



An annual Festival of Czech and Slovak Films. Next Film Festival 25-29 March 2026


From Venice to Cannes, the Sydney CZECH & SLOVAK FILM FESTIVAL returns to Dendy Newtown from 25–29 March 2026, presenting a dynamic lineup of award-winning films, gripping dramas, provocative true stories and crowd-pleasing comedies – many screening as Australian premieres.

• Opening the festival on Wednesday 25 March is the Venice-premiered drama FATHER/Otec, starring Milan Ondrík in what he describes as the most challenging role of his career. The emotionally powerful film makes its Australian premiere at the festival. Ondrík also appears in CERNAK/Černák, the gripping continuation of the saga of notorious mafia boss Miki.
• Cinema and literature lovers will be drawn to FRANZ, an evocative biopic of Franz Kafka from Oscar-nominated director Agnieszka Holland. For families, SUGAR CANDY/Cukrkandl delivers mystery, adventure and a fresh on-screen transformation from popular actress Tereza Ramba.
• The festival also tackles urgent social themes. PERLA / Perla explores exile, political persecution and personal sacrifice through the story of a Slovak dissident artist living in Austria. BROKEN VOICES/ Sbormistrconfronts abuse of power in the wake of a notorious choir scandal, delivering a timely and unflinching examination of silence and accountability.
• Fresh from its Cannes World Premiere in the prestigious Un Certain Regard section, CARAVAN/Karavan stars Aňa Geislerová in a moving road movie about a mother and her disabled son travelling through Italy. The festival closes on a high note on Sunday 29 March with DREAM TEAM, a brand-new comedy inspired by a true story from the Sydney Paralympics.
• A curated selection of witty and daring short films, including award-winning works from Prague’s renowned FAMU and Bratislava’s VŠMU film schools, will screen before each feature.

ALL FILMS HAVE ENGLISH SUBTITLES