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Security News This Week: Porn Showed Up on Legit News Sites Thanks to Internet Rot
Plus: China's pipeline probing, a Chromebook debacle, and more of the week's top security news.
Brian Barrett is Executive Editor, News at WIRED, overseeing day to day coverage across the site. Prior to WIRED he was the editor in chief of the tech and culture site Gizmodo and was a business reporter for the Yomiuri Shimbun, Japan’s largest daily newspaper.
WIRED is where tomorrow is realized. It is the essential source of information and ideas that make sense of a world in constant transformation. The WIRED conversation illuminates how technology is changing every aspect of our lives—from culture to business, science to design. The breakthroughs and innovations that we uncover lead to new ways of thinking, new connections, and new industries.
To revist this article, visit My Profile, then View saved stories .
This week, Venmo took a long overdue step toward privacy by eliminating its global social feed in its latest redesign. That's good! Now you can no longer witness an endless stream of complete strangers sending money to and from one another. But privacy advocates say that until Venmo makes every transaction private by default , it's still a liability for users who may not realize they have to dig through the settings to hide their Venmo lives from others. 
Amnesty International and a consortium of researchers and media organizations this week published a major investigation into the NSO Group, and Israel-based spyware vendor. The report alleges that governments have used NSO Group malware to spy on activists, journalists, politicians, and executives; the NSO Group issued multiple denials. Security researchers, meanwhile, see the revelations as evidence that they need more visibility into iOS and Android to better spot attacks like this , and prevent them going forward.
In another global team-up this week, nations around the world detailed years of aggressive hacking behavior from China, including indictments from the US Department of Justice. While China has historically focused on espionage, its increasing reliance on criminal contractors in recent years has led to more reckless campaigns. 
Speaking of reckless, remember that absurdly widespread ransomware attack that hit at the beginning of the month? Just shy of three weeks later, IT management firm Kaseya finally got its hands on universal a decryption tool , meaning that any victims who still hadn't already recovered their data through backups or other means can finally breathe easy. At least, until the next ransomware scare. We also took a look at Space Jam: A New Legacy and the bad lessons it's teaching the youth about AI.
And there's more. Each week we round up all the security news WIRED didn’t cover in depth. Click on the headlines to read the full stories, and stay safe out there.
A very good catch by Motherboard and Twitter user @dox_gay this week: news sites like The Washington Post , New York magazine, and more inadvertently displayed pornography on older pages. (And yes, that includes a handful of old WIRED stories.) The culprit? A video platform called Vidme that operated from 2014 to 2017, whose domain was since purchased by an adult site called 5 Star Porn HD. Web pages that had a Vidme player embedded from when the service was viable began showing thumbnails of graphic sexual content instead of whatever had originally been there. As Motherboard also notes, it's an amusing example of a serious problem: the rotting infrastructure of the internet at large. 
Chromebook owners may have found themselves unable to log into their devices this week. A bug introduced in a recent update made it so that the cloud-based laptops wouldn't accept passwords on the log-in screen, leaving users locked out indefinitely. Not great! But what makes it even worse is that the bug apparently comes down to a single, tiny typo. Some Chrome OS programmer somewhere left out an “&” in a conditional statement, none of their colleagues caught it, and chaos ensued. Google pulled the bad update quickly, and a fix is rolling out now, but that's little comfort to the Chromebook owners who were affected.
Twitter this week disclosed that very, very, very, very, very few of its users actually take advantage of two-factor authentication . Only 2.3 percent, to be precise. This is not great! Two-factor can't stop every attack , but it provides a huge security upgrade for not much extra hassle, on a platform that suffers account takeover epidemics on a regular basis. You can even use an authentication app instead of your phone number , an even more secure and easy to manage method. If you're one of the 97.7 percent of active Twitter users not using two-factor, please take 90 seconds out of your day to set it up.
Remember how we were just saying that China has historically focused on espionage? That's still true. But a troubling alert from the FBI and the Department of Homeland Security this week indicates that the country's hackers have at least considered more disruptive attacks. From around 2011-2013, they probed nearly two dozen US pipeline companies, and not just for intellectual property. “This activity was ultimately intended to help China develop cyberattack capabilities against US pipelines to physically damage pipelines or disrupt pipeline operations,” the alert reads. It's the sort of behavior you've come to expect from Russia or ransomware hooligans , but less so China. Fortunately, the incidents were years ago; the hope is that it doesn't revisit those plans.
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Old Vidme embeds turn into a hub of porn after domain purchase






By



Kim Lyons @SocialKimLy






Jul 22, 2021, 6:01pm EDT














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Several prominent news sites are now unexpectedly showing embedded porn videos
Here’s (yet another) argument against using third-party embeds on your respectable website: Porn company 5 Star HD Porn bought the expired domain for video hosting site Vidme, which went out of business in 2017 . This means that any websites with Vidme embeds now have porn on them. According to Motherboard , which reported the story first, the list of websites with unexpected porn embeds includes New York Magazine, the Washington Post , HuffPost , and others. And yes, we discovered one such embed on The Verge and have since disabled it.
It’s a very extreme example of link rot, which is what happens when online content or images are deleted or otherwise broken, so the links don’t point back to their original targets. We saw another widespread example of this after former President Trump was banned from Twitter in January after inciting a riot at the Capitol. The thousands of tweets the former president sent out over the years he was on Twitter were wiped out, and any embeds of the tweets now display as empty gray boxes. Some of the former president’s tweets must be preserved under the Presidential Records Act (which predates Twitter by more than four decades), and there’s a sortable archive of most of his tweets built by an independent developer, so his tweets haven’t totally disappeared from the internet.
Most social media platforms have enabled embeds of their content; Twitter activated embeds in 2012, and Facebook, Snapchat, YouTube, and Instagram all allow some version of embeds as well. Reddit has an option on its embedded content which allows users to have them blanked out if the post is edited.
Used correctly, embedded content can help illustrate a blog post or news item online, and provide a layer of credibility. But when links go bad, as they apparently have in the Vidme case, it can be a serious headache to deal with thousands of embeds that don’t go where they’re supposed to.
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https://www.wired.com/story/porn-vidme-player-china-twitter-chromebooks-security-news/
https://www.theverge.com/2021/7/22/22589403/porn-site-bought-expired-video-hosting-site-old-embeds
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