Thursday, November 27, 2025

Europol releases report on how they tackle cybercrime

 

“From ‘Mail-Order Brides’ to ‘Passport Bros,’ the International Dating Industry Often Sells Traditional Gender Roles”

A weird glamorization of sexpattery as “international dating”.


Good news on the AI slop front in Social Media

The Indicator: “Two platform updates this week gave me a rare feeling of hope about AI slop. On Wednesday, TikTok announced it would pilot new controls to let users filter how much AI-generated content they see on their For You feeds. 

The platform already allows users to dial up and down certain topics like current affairs, dance, or fitness. It’s now promising to test letting people decide how much synthetic video they want to see. 

The move follows Pinterest’s lead; Bluesky users can also filter out AI content by subscribing to a third-party labeler. I would bet that more platforms will follow. (Our guide to AI labelsoutlines down how different platforms handle AI content, and gets continuously updated.)…”

See also CNET – AI Slop Has Turned Social Media Into an Antisocial Wasteland. Commentary: Platforms that once helped us stay in touch have become fractured and impersonal — and AI slop and deepfakes are making it so much worse.


Now investigate Hertfordshire Police for their attempt to subvert democracy

“Parents ‘vindicated’ after police admit unlawful arrest over WhatsApp row”, the Guardian reports. The subheading is “Hertfordshire police agree to pay £20,000 to Rosalind Levine and Maxie Allen, who were held for 11 hours after complaining about daughter’s school”.

I posted about this couple’s experience last April: Boiling frogs in Salem and Hertfordshire.

One aspect of the story that the Free Speech Union’s Frederick Attenborough highlighted at the time was that Hertfordshire Police didn’t just put the frighteners on Rosalind Levine and Maxie Allen, they also threatened – in writing – their local county councillor, Michelle Vince, that if she continued to advocate on their behalf she too might find herself “liable to being recorded as a suspect in a harassment investigation”. And they told Michelle Vince to pass on that warning to the local MP, Sir Oliver Dowden.

As Sir Oliver said in the Times, “Police risk ‘curtailing democracy’ by stopping MPs doing their job”.

Today’s Guardian article continues,

Allen claimed he and Levine were not abusive and were never told which communications were criminal, saying it was “completely Kafkaesque”.

A Hertfordshire police spokesperson said: “Whilst there are no issues of misconduct involving any officer in relation to this matter, Hertfordshire Constabulary has accepted liability solely on the basis that the legal test around necessity of arrest was not met in this instance.

“Therefore Mr Haddow-Allen and Ms Levine were wrongfully arrested and detained in January 2025. It would be inappropriate to make further comment at this stage.”




You wish. Further comment is both appropriate and necessary. There bloody well are issues of misconduct involving at least one officer in relation to this matter: whichever officer tried to frighten off both a local councillor and an MP from representing their constituents.



Meta made $16 billion from scam ads in 2024; 10% of its income; internally estimates that its platform is involved in one third of scams in the US

 
Myanmar military demolishes 150 buildings in scam compound on the Thailand border
 
Password for the security camera system at the Louvre Museum was “louvre”
 

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 worldHumor FTC and CFPBBenefit Theft Scam CompoundsBusiness Email compromise fraud Bitcoin and Crypto FraudRomance Fraud and Sextortion 

Trump buys millions in Boeing bonds while awarding it contracts

"Your punishment for having a knife when they searched you would be very different from the thief's. For him to have a knife was mere misbehavior, tradition, he didn't know any better. But for you to have one was 'terrorism.'"

~ Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn


The wisdom of the elders, the greed of the rich   

As the planet spirals toward environmental collapse, elders like Attenborough, Earle, Hansen and Suzuki have spent decades warning us – and offering hope. But the billionaires in bunkers aren’t listening. They are too busy getting rich off our destruction.


Labor is ‘budgeting for public service job losses’


NACC chief executive apologises to parliament for inaccurate evidence


 Farms -  ATO warning as Aussie taxpayers audited in surprise $25 million blitz: 'Bad apples'


An Australian accountant has shared how she uncovered $18,000 worth of tax return fraud, warning it could happen to anyone. Scammers have been hacking into Aussies’ myGov accounts and lodging fraudulent tax returns with the Australian Taxation Office (ATO) to get their hands on tax refunds

ATO warning after accountant finds $18,000 MyGov fraud when doing client's tax return: 'Can happen to anybody'


Raising taxes on the ultrarich Economic Policy Institute


Trump buys millions in Boeing bonds while awarding it contracts Responsible Statecraft


Ministry of Justice set to take away the right to a trial by jury The Canary


Fox News Poll: Voters say White House is doing more harm than good on economy Fox News


 Pilot captures jaw-dropping northern lights show from 36,000 feet (photos) Space


ICE Says Critical Evidence In Abuse Case Was Lost In ‘System Crash’ a Day After It Was Sued 404 Media 


‘People tell me they haven’t eaten in days’ BBC


Maine’s Platner: ‘If I Had My Way’ Google and Palantir ‘Wouldn’t Exist’ Washington Free Beacon


The Feds Want to Make It Illegal to Even Possess an Anarchist Zine The Intercept


You Don’t Hate The Mass Media Enough Caitline



Wednesday, November 26, 2025

Australia reports $260 million in losses to online shopping for first nine months of the year

        Salman Rushdie profile


       In the Sunday Times Johanna Thomas-Corr has a profile of Salman Rushdie: ‘I had no pulse. That’s how close it was’(possibly paywalled ?)
       Among Rushdie's comments:
He feels fiction has lost some of this openness and scope. “People on writing courses are endlessly told to write what you know. And I say to them, only write what you know if what you know is interesting. Quite often it isn’t. A lot of these people come from bourgeois, middle-class families and their experiences are quite similar. I say go out and find something interesting.” He wishes more fiction writers would have the ambition of Charles Dickens, to range across society.

“Things Happen” The Sense of an Ending


Former Google chief accused of spying on employees through account ‘backdoor’ Los Angeles 


 Imoleayo Samuel Aina, aka “Alice Dave,” 27, of Nigeria was sentenced today to 72 months in prison, five years of supervised release, and $3,250 in restitution by United States District Judge Joel H. Slomsky for offenses related to the sexual extortion and death of a young man in the Eastern District of Pennsylvania.

Aina and co-defendant Samuel Olasunkanmi Abiodun were arrested on a complaint and warrant in Nigeria, taken into custody by the FBI on July 31, 2024, and extradited to the United States to face charges in this case. They and another Nigerian co-defendant, Afeez Olatunji Adewale, 25, were then charged by indictment in August 2024.

Nigerian Man Sentenced to Six Years in Prison for Cyberstalking and Other Charges Related to the Sexual Extortion and Death of a Local Young Man


US forms scams task force to tackle organized crime and fraud from Southeast Asia

DOJ releases annual report on elder fraud activities; top two topics of complaints were crypto romance frauds and tech support
 
China says the $13 billion in Bitcoin that the US seized from indicted scam compound leader Chen Zhi was money stolen from Chinese investors in a bitcoin mining operation
 
Fraud-related industries:  The Southeast Asia scam compounds apparently began as online casinos.  It seems that the Chinese Triads -- organized crime -- are involved.  What do we know about organized crime involvement in online gambling more generally?  Would there be many consumer complaints about online gambling if there were a wide variety of deceptive claims?  And what of the pornography industry?  We did a case while I was at the FTC against a porn company that asked for credit cards for a free trial, promising that credit cards would not be charged (they were).  We initially had only 16 complaints, but this grew into a huge multi-million dollar fraud, run by a New York organized crime family.  People just rarely complained.  I fear that online gambling and online porn are areas of massive consumer fraud that we simply don’t hear about from victims.   One thing they seem to have in common is that they have found a way to get access to the credit card system.  Let me know if you can if my suspicions are correct – or not.
 

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 world

Humor 

FTC and CFPB

Benefit Theft 

Scam Compounds

Business Email compromise fraud 

Bitcoin and Crypto Fraud

Ransomware and data breaches

Jamaica and Lottery Fraud

Romance Fraud and Sextortion 


How billionaires took over American politics

Worker at Australian Taxation Office call centre takes court action demanding ‘same job, same pay’

Fair Work Commission application comes amid scrutiny of ATO’s use of for-profit call centres


AGAINST ENTHUSIASM:  Modern life is one endless sugar rush. Only a healthy dose of cynicism can save us now. “The world—what’s left of it—needs more cynics and fewer HR-approved wellness retreats.”

Trump and big tech take two more stabs at ending AI democracy Blood in the Machine


“Senator Ron Wyden, an Oregon Democrat, wants to examine how the nation’s largest bank handled the reporting of more than $1 billion in suspicious transactions. The top Democrat on the Senate Finance Committee issued a report on Thursday calling for an investigation into whether JPMorgan Chase deliberately underreported more than $1 billion in suspicious transactions by Jeffrey Epstein, the disgraced financier and convicted sex offender:


How billionaires took over American politics

Washington Post via MSN – “The concentration of wealth among the richest Americans is unlike anything in history — and so is billionaires’ influence in politics. In an era defined by major political divisions and massive wealth accumulation for the richest Americans, billionaires are spending unprecedented amounts on U.S. politics. 

Dozens have stepped up their political giving in recent years, leading to a record-breaking surge of donations by the ultrarich in 2024. Since 2000, political giving by the wealthiest 100 Americans to federal elections has gone up almost 140 times, well outpacing the growing costs of campaigns, a Washington Post analysis found. In 2000, the country’s wealthiest 100 people donated about a quarter of 1 percent of the total cost of federal elections, according to a Post analysis of data from OpenSecrets. 

By 2024, they covered about 7.5 percent, even as the cost of such elections soared. In other words, roughly 1 in every 13 dollars spent in last year’s national elections was donated by a handful of the country’s richest people…


The CPA and the Lawyer Who Served Jeffrey Epstein—and Control His Fortune and Secrets WSJ


Inside the extended courtship linking Jeffrey Epstein, Peter Thiel, and Israeli officials San Francisco Standard


Larry Summers and the Hunger Games Ann Pettifor

Tuesday, November 25, 2025

Musk’s Hall of X Mirrors

Over on X it turns out most of that ecosystem is based in Russia, Nigeria, Bangladesh
If you're still using X, the Nazi, porn addict, and spam app, why are you still using

Musk is adored...by bots 😂

New location feature on Elon Musk's X 'weaponised' to spread misinformation

 

Krasnov Cult: Musk Accidentally Proves Most MAGA Accounts On Twitter Live In Russia


Elon Musk’s Worthless, Poisoned Hall of Mirrors

By CHARLIE WARZEL

Charlie Warzel is a staff writer at The Atlantic and the author of its newsletter Galaxy Brain, about technology, media, and big ideas. He can be reached via email.
 He is a co-author of Out of Office: The Big Problem and Bigger Promise of Working From Home. Previously he was a writer at large for The New York Times’ Opinion section and a senior writer at BuzzFeed News






How X blew up its own platform with a new location feature

Over the weekend, Elon Musk’s X rolled out a feature that had the immediate result of sowing maximum chaos. 

The update, called “About This Account,” allows people to click on the profile of an X user and see such information as: which country the account was created in, where its user is currently based, and how many times the username has been changed. Nikita Bier, X’s head of product, said the feature was “an important first step to securing the integrity of the global town square.” Roughly four hours later, with the update in the wild, Bier sent another post: “I need a drink.”



Almost immediately, “About This Account” stated that many prominent and prolific pro-MAGA accounts, which signaled that they were run by “patriotic” Americans, were based in countries such as Nigeria, Russia, India, and Thailand. @MAGANationX, an account with almost 400,000 followers and whose bio says it is a “Patriot Voice for We The People,” is based in “Eastern Europe (Non-EU),” according to the feature, and has changed its username five times since the account was made, last year. 

On X and Bluesky, users dredged up countless examples of fake or misleading rage-baiting accounts posting aggressive culture-war takes to large audiences. An account called “Maga Nadine” claims to be living in and posting from the United States but is, according to X, based in Morocco. An “America First” account with 67,000 followers is apparently based in Bangladesh. Poetically, the X handle @American is based in Pakistan, according to the feature.


At first glance, these revelations appear to confirm what researchers and close observers have long known: that foreign actors (whether bots or humans) are posing as Americans and piping political-engagement bait, mis- and disinformation, and spam into people’s timeline. (X and Musk did not respond to my requests for comment.)


X’s decision to show where accounts are based is, theoretically, a positive step in the direction of transparency for the platform, which has let troll and spam accounts proliferate since Musk’s purchase, in late 2022. And yet the scale of the deception—as revealed by the “About” feature—suggests that in his haste to turn X into a political weapon for the far right, Musk may have revealed that the platform he’s long called “the number 1 source of news on Earth” is really just a worthless, poisoned hall of mirrors.

Read: Elon Musk is trying to rewrite history


If only it were that simple. Adding to the confusion of the feature’s rollout are multiple claims from users that the “About” function has incorrectly labeled some accounts. The X account of Hank Green, a popular YouTuber, says his account is based in Japan; Green told me Sunday that he’d never been to Japan. Bier posted on X that there were “a few rough edges that will be resolved by Tuesday,” referring to potentially incorrect account information.

 (On some accounts, a note is appended pointing out that the user may be operating X through a proxy connection, such as a VPN, which would produce misleading information.) For now, the notion that there might be false labels could give any bad actor the ability to claim they’ve been mislabeled.


This is the final post-truthification of a platform that long ago pivoted toward a maxim used by the journalist Peter Pomerantsev to refer to post-Soviet Russia: Nothing is true and everything is possible. This is how you get people apparently faking that the Department of Homeland Security’s account was created in Israel (a claim that has 2 million views and counting); both DHS and Bier had to intervene and assure users that the government’s account was not a foreign actor. 

High-profile right-wing accounts that previously served as yes-men for Musk—such as Ian Miles Cheong, a Malaysian who purportedly lives in the United Arab Emirates and posts incessant, racist drivel about American politics—have melted down over the platform’s decision to dox users.

Across the site, people are using the feature to try to score political points. Prominent posters have argued that the mainstream media have quoted mislabeled accounts without “minimum due diligence.” This nightmare is not limited to trolls or influencers. On Sunday, the Israel Foreign Ministry posted a screenshot of an account that purported to be reporting news from Gaza, next to a screenshot saying it was based in Poland.
 “Reporting from Gaza is fake & not reliable. Makes you wonder how many more fake reports have you read?” In response, the person in question posted a video on X on Sunday evening insisting he was in Gaza, living in a tent after military strikes killed his wife and three children. “I’ve been living in Gaza, I am living now in Gaza, and I will continue living in Gaza until I die.”
Watching all of this unfold has been dizzying. On Sunday, I encountered a post claiming that, according to the “About” feature, a popular and verified Islamophobic, pro-Israel account (that posts aggressively about American politics, including calling for Zohran Mamdani’s deportation) was based in “South Asia” and had changed its username 15 times. 
When I went to X to verify, I noticed that this same account had spent Saturday posting screenshots of other political accounts, accusing them of being fake “Pakistani Garbage.” This is X in 2025: Potentially fake accounts crying at other potentially fake accounts that they aren’t real, all while refusing to acknowledge that they themselves aren’t who they say they are—a Russian nesting doll of bullshit.
There are a few ways to interpret all of this. First is that this is a story about incentives. Platforms not only goad users into posting more and more extreme and provocative content by rewarding them with attention; they also help people monetize that attention. Just before the 2016 election, BuzzFeed’s Craig Silverman and Lawrence Alexander uncovered a network of Macedonian teens who recognized that America’s deep political divisions were a lucrative vein to exploit and pumped out bogus news articles that were designed to go viral on Facebook, which they then put advertisements on. 
Today it’s likely that at least some of these bogus MAGA accounts make pennies on the dollar via X’s Creator program, which rewards engaging accounts with a cut of advertising revenue; many of them have the telltale blue check mark.
As Bellingcat’s Eliot Higgins noted on Bluesky, X’s architecture turns what should be an information ecosystem into a performative one. “Actors aren’t communicating; they’re staging provocations for yield,” he wrote. “The result is disordered discourse: signals detached from truth, identity shaped by escalation, and a feedback loop where the performance eclipses reality itself.” Beyond the attentional and financial rewards, platforms such as X have gutted their trust-and-safety or moderation teams in service of a bastardized notion of free-speech maximalism—creating the conditions for this informational nightmare.
The second lesson here is that X appears to be inflating the culture wars in ultimately unknowable but certainly important ways. On X this weekend, I watched one (seemingly real) person coming to terms with this fact. “Fascinating to look through every account I’ve disagreed with and find out they’re all fake,” they posted on Saturday. 
To be certain, X is not the main cause for American political division or arguing online, but it is arguably one of its greatest amplifiers. X is still a place where many journalists and editors in newsrooms across America share and consume political news. Political influencers, media personalities, and even politicians will take posts from supposed ordinary accounts and hold them up as examples of their ideological opponents’ dysfunction, corruption, or depravity.
How many of these accounts, arguments, or news cycles were a product of empty rage bait, proffered by foreign or just fake actors? Recent examples suggest the system is easily gamed: 32 to 37 percent of the online activity around Cracker Barrel’s controversial logo change this summer was driven by fake accounts, according to consultants hired by the restaurant chain. 
It’s impossible to know the extent of this manufactured outrage, but it doesn’t necessarily matter—the presence of so much fakery makes it possible to cast aspersions on any piece of information, any actor, or any conversation to the point that the truth is effectively meaningless.
It’s worth stepping back to see this for what it is: the complete perversion of the actual premise of not just social media but the internet. Although this crisis centers on X, most major social-media networks have fallen victim to variants of this problem. Fakery and manipulation are inevitable for platforms at this scale. Even when Twitter and Facebook were more committed to battling outside influence or enforcing platform rules, they were playing whack-a-mole. 
The idealism that these companies were founded with—Mark Zuckerberg wanted to connect the world, and Musk has said he wants to maximize free speech (Twitter’s original founders used similar language)—has decayed as they steered their products toward maximizing profits and playing politics. The self-proclaimed techno-utopians in Silicon Valley who have helped build, invest in, or cheerlead for these companies have enabled this ruin. They’ve traded reality for profit and prioritized technologies that aren’t just soulless and amoral, but inhuman in the most literal sense of the word.
A rational response to all of this would be for people to log off. Indeed, that now seems like the least likely, but most optimistic, conclusion—that a group of people who realize they’re being goaded into participation in an algorithmic fun house decide to opt out of a psychologically painful discourse trap altogether. We should all be so lucky.