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Russia opens criminal case into Telegram founder Pavel Durov | Russia

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Russia has launched a criminal investigation into the Telegram founder, Pavel Durov, on suspicion of “abetting terrorist activities”, further escalating the Kremlin’s standoff with the widely used messaging app.

The state newspaper Rossiyskaya Gazeta reported on Tuesday that a case had been opened “based on materials from Russia’s federal security service”, which accused the app of being compromised by western and Ukrainian intelligence.

Durov, who lives abroad, criticised the investigation against him, describing it as an attempt to “suppress the right to privacy and free speech”.

“A sad spectacle of a state afraid of its own people,” he wrote on social media.

Earlier this month, Moscow announced it would slow down Telegram’s traffic because of what it said were multiple violations, as the Kremlin attempts to steer tens of millions of Russian users towards a state-controlled alternative, known as MAX.

The strategy forms part of the Kremlin’s push to build a “sovereign internet”, an online space tightly controlled by the state.

Asked about the investigation into Durov, the Kremlin spokesperson, Dmitry Peskov, said authorities had identified quantities of material on Telegram that could “potentially pose a threat” to Russia.

Pavel Durov has long had a complicated relationship with the Kremlin Photograph: Giuseppe Cacace/AFP/Getty Images

“A large number of violations and the unwillingness of Telegram’s administration to cooperate with our authorities have been recorded,” Peskov said. “Our relevant authorities are taking the measures they deem appropriate.”

Rossiyskaya Gazeta, quoting officials, claimed Telegram had been used in 13 alleged Ukrainian plots targeting senior Russian military officers, as well as in tens of thousands of bombings, arson attacks and killings since the start of the war.

Despite the pressure, Moscow has stopped short of blocking Telegram outright because of its widespread use among civilians and officials, and its role as a key communication tool on the frontline.

Russian officials have indicated they would be willing to allow Telegram to continue operating if it complied with Russian law, which human rights campaigners say would mean granting access to private chats and purging opposition channels.

The app’s ultra-libertarian founder has long had a complicated relationship with the Kremlin.

Durov, 42, left Russia in 2014 after selling his first company, VK, often described as a Russian version of Facebook, following pressure from the authorities. He established Telegram in Dubai, where he now lives. He holds Emirati and French citizenship.

Russian authorities tried but failed to block Telegram in 2018, after which an uneasy accommodation appeared to emerge with Durov. But Moscow’s renewed crackdown on media and online platforms it does not control has once again put Telegram in its sights.

Separately, Russia has blocked WhatsApp, Facebook and YouTube, prompting a surge in VPN downloads among Russian users.

The tech billionaire has also faced scrutiny from western authorities, who have criticised what they said was weak moderation on the app.

Last August, he was detained and held for three days in France during an investigation into crimes linked to Telegram, including the circulation of child sexual abuse material, drug trafficking and fraudulent transactions.



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United Cajun Navy wants to join search for Nancy Guthrie in Arizona

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TUCSON, Ariz. – A Louisiana-based nonprofit that specializes in providing disaster relief, search and rescue, and aid during emergencies said it has offered its services to Arizona authorities in the search for Nancy Guthrie. 

Josh Gill, the incident commander for the United Cajun Navy (UCN), said the group reached out to the Pima County Sheriff’s Office and other law enforcement agencies involved in the Guthrie case. 

“We want to provide what we can… to help with the search and, hopefully, bring Mrs. Guthrie home,” Gill told Fox News Digital outside of Guthrie’s Catalina Foothills home. “We just want to provide some resources. I know they’re accepting volunteers now, and they just want to make sure the volunteers aren’t potentially contaminating an investigation or disrupting an investigation.”

United Cajun Navy representative Josh Gill in front of Nancy Guthrie's home.

United Cajun Navy representative Josh Gill in front of Nancy Guthrie’s home. Gill said the Louisiana-based nonprofit has reached out to authorities to assist in the search for Guthrie.  (Fox News Digital)

A spokesperson for the sheriff’s department told Fox News Digital that the agency was unaware of UCN’s offer.

“We have not been advised of this group reaching out to PCSD about helping with search efforts,” the spokesperson said. 

The UCN has assisted law enforcement with searches for missing persons, such as when dozens of children went missing amid severe floods in Kerrville, Texas last year. 

House Speaker Mike Johnson, R-La., once praised the nonprofit in a video message in which he spoke about disaster relief. 

FOX NEWS TRUE CRIME NEWSLETTER: RANSOM DEADLINE PASSES, KEY EVIDENCE EMERGES IN NANCY GUTHRIE CASE

Nancy Guthrie investigation continues, with a shot of Guthrie and an overhead her home

Authorities in Arizona are still searching for clues in the Nancy Guthrie case. The 84-year-old was last seen at her Tucson home on Jan. 31.  (Getty Images)

The investigation into Guthrie’s disappearance has entered its fourth week and the whereabouts of the 84-year-old remain unknown. In addition, no arrests have been made. 

“Volunteer organizations sometimes aren’t necessarily looked at as a viable resource,” Gill said, noting that some groups may lack experience in missing persons searches. 

The UCN reached out to the sheriff’s office soon after Guthrie went missing, Gill said. The offer was prompted, in part, by the despair of Guthrie’s family, including her daughter, NBC “Today” co-host Savannah Guthrie. 

A Pima County Sheriff's deputy reaching into a mailbox to retrieve mail at Nancy Guthrie's home.

A Pima County Sheriff’s deputy retrieves the mail from the Guthrie mailbox outside Nancy Guthrie’s home in Catalina Foothills, on Feb. 11, 2026. (Patrick Breen/The Republic / USA Today Network via Imagn Images)

“To see Savannah Guthrie in tears, breaking down, I can only imagine if that was my family member,” Gill said. “Knowing that somebody’s family member is out there for such a long time, we want to help.” 

Earlier this month, Savannah Guthrie’s husband, Mike Feldman, visited “Today” on behalf of his wife to show appreciation for the support the family has received, a source told Fox News Digital. 

Feldman has been traveling back and forth from New York to Arizona, where Savannah is with her family, as the search for her mother continues.

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On Tuesday, she posted a video on Instagram where she pleaded for her mother’s kidnappers to return her for a $1 million reward. 

“We still believe in a miracle. We still believe that she can come home,” an emotional Savannah Guthrie said. “We also know that she may be lost. She may already be gone.”

“If this is what is to be, then we will accept it,” she added. “Someone out there knows something.”

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Discord pushes back age verification debut to 2H’26 • The Register

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Discord is delaying age verification checks for a little while after its plan inspired a lot of hand-wringing among the community. But it’s not backing down. 

Discord cofounder and CTO Stanislav Vishnevskiy said in a Tuesday blog post that, okay, maybe the company messed up when it announced it was going to verify the ages of users beginning in March and restrict unverified accounts from accessing potentially adult spaces. 

“We’ve made mistakes. I won’t pretend we haven’t,” Vishnevskiy said. “Many of you walked away thinking we’re requiring face scans and ID uploads from everyone just to use Discord.”

The Discord CTO said the company has no plans to do that, as we explained in our story earlier this month, “but the fact that so many people believe it tells us we failed at our most basic job: clearly explaining what we’re doing and why. That’s on us.”

Discord’s actual plans to verify users’ ages isn’t explicitly changing, the company said today. It’s still going to use an automated system, and around 90 percent of users should never notice a change. The system will work out their age based on account signals, including the account’s age, whether a payment method is on file, what type of servers a user belongs to, and other “general patterns of account activity.” And that’ll be it.

Messages, conversations, or posts are not reviewed as part of age determination, he said. 

“Discord already runs safety systems that catch spam rings, prevent raids, and detect coordinated abuse, powered by our rules engine,” Vishnevskiy explained. Age determination will work largely the same way, and will be done by internal Discord systems, not a third-party vendor. 

When age verification is needed, Vishnevskiy noted, users will be able to choose from multiple vendors, all of which will be listed on Discord’s website, and users will be able to review what methods they use, how data is handled, and the like. 

Persona? Not grata

One age verification partner that won’t be present in Discord’s eventual rollout is Persona, which recently caught flack for reportedly exposing a front end on a government server. The researchers who exposed the opening speculated that it was of a widespread conspiracy to turn identity verification data into a government-controlled people tracker. 

Persona has been in communication with the researchers and has expressed gratitude to them for pointing out the exposed front end, but also disagreed with the way the researchers characterized their discovery in a blog post published Tuesday.

The company said that it has no active contracts with any US government agency, and said the website in question was a test environment set up as part of its ongoing effort to achieve FedRAMP authorization to sell its products to the US government. Persona told The Register that its plans with the US government are limited to workforce verification that would ensure the feds are hiring who they think they’re hiring. 

Discord noted in today’s blog post that it had partnered with Persona when it was evaluating age verification partners, but only ran a brief test with the company in January that was limited to the UK. After the testing period concluded, Discord decided not to move forward with Persona as a partner. 

“We’ve set a new bar for any partner offering facial age estimation, including that it must be performed entirely on-device, meaning your biometric data never leaves your phone,” Vishnevskiy wrote. “Persona did not meet that bar.”

Noting the word “including” in Vishnevskiy’s statement, we asked both Persona and Discord if that meant there were other concerns with Persona’s systems that inspired Discord’s rejection. Persona told us that it didn’t want to speculate on Discord’s internal decision making, and Discord declined to elaborate. 

Discord plans to pull the trigger om the system in the second half of this year, the company said. 

“We’re listening. We’ll get this right. And when we ship, you’ll be able to see for yourselves,” Vishnevskiy asserted. ®



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Ministers urged to impose temporary ban on crypto political donations | Politics

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Political donations in cryptocurrency should be subject to an urgent temporary ban to stop foreign interference in British elections, the chair of the national security committee has said.

Matt Western, who leads the committee of MPs and peers, said a moratorium was needed until the risks of donations in cryptocurrency have been dealt with – including adequate checks on the source of the money.

The committee also called for a review of sentences for electoral offences, suggesting more of a deterrence was needed, with police highlighting that many covert surveillance measures can only be used for crimes that would lead to jail time of at least three years.

He wrote to Steve Reed, the cabinet minister in charge of electoral finance, asking him to take immediate action, after the new elections bill did not contain measures to restrict donations in cryptocurrency.

The government is considering its policy on donations in crypto after Reform UK became the first party to say it would accept contributions in digital currency earlier this year. It is believed to have received its first registrable donations in cryptocurrency last year and the party has set up its own crypto portal to receive contributions, saying it is subject to “enhanced” checks.

In his letter, Western said the committee was concerned that foreign state intent to interfere in UK political finance may grow ahead of the next election given the worsening global security environment.

It questioned the lack of any clear national enforcement lead for political finance and foreign interference risk, highlighting that responsibility is split across the Electoral Commission, the Metropolitan police service, counter-terror policing, the National Crime Agency, MI5 and local police forces.

“This does not inspire confidence that risks are being investigated and mitigated in the most efficient and joined-up way,” he said, recommending a single national police lead for political finance, with a specific emphasis on foreign interference risks.

In relation to crypto, the committee said there would be “political sensitivities” around taking action against donations in digital currency. But Western said: “The bill should introduce a temporary moratorium on accepting crypto donations until the Electoral Commission produces statutory guidance.”

He said interim guidance should require political parties only to use cryptocurrency service providers that are registered with the Financial Conduct Authority, only accept donations where there can be high confidence in the identity of the ultimate source of funds, and reject donations where there has been use of mechanisms which obscure the ultimate source of funds.

The committee also raised concerns that the bill’s proposals for “know your donor” checks do not go far enough. He said there do not appear to be adequate requirements for donors to demonstrate source of wealth, and the committee is concerned about the possibility that permissible corporate donors or individuals may still act as conduits for foreign donations.

Western said data from the Electoral Commission suggests that the risk of foreign money entering the system is real, even if the proportion of known activity remains low”.

Government sources told the Guardian last year that ministers are looking at ways to ban political donations made with cryptocurrency but the crackdown was not ready for the elections bill due early this year.

The Electoral Commission provides guidance on crypto donations but ministers accept any ban would probably have to come from the government through legislation.

Campaign groups have highlighted risks of allowing donations in cryptocurrency. Tim Picton, senior advocacy adviser at Spotlight on Corruption, said: “Allowing crypto donations significantly increases the risk of illicit finance polluting our politics and foreign interference undermining our democracy.

“With crypto, there is a range of tools available to malign actors looking to conceal the true source of a donation. The Electoral Commission and law enforcement face an uphill struggle trying to regulate against and contain this evolving threat.

“A ban on crypto donations must be enshrined in the new Representation of the People Bill, to ensure it can’t be overturned in the future without a proper parliamentary process and extensive consultation with law enforcement agencies and the Electoral Commission.”

A Ministry of Housing, Communities and Local Government spokesperson said: “Through our Representation of the People bill we are fighting against the risk of foreign interference by strengthening rules around political donations.

“We have also commissioned an independent review, led by former permanent secretary Philip Rycroft, to explore how we can go even further to toughen up the safeguards in place against illicit money from abroad – including cryptocurrencies.”



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Zachery Ty Bryan sentenced to 16 months in prison for DUI conviction

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“Home Improvement” star Zachery Ty Bryan has been sentenced to 16 months behind bars.

Bryan, 44, was sentenced Monday in California after pleading guilty in connection with his February 2024 DUI arrest in La Quinta.

According to court records obtained by Fox News Digital, Bryan reached an agreement with prosecutors at a Feb. 23 re-arraignment, pleading guilty to felony driving under the influence and acknowledging an added penalty tied to two previous DUI convictions.

Bryan was convicted at the Larson Justice Center of driving under the influence, BAC 0.08 or higher. Two additional charges — including hit-and-run and property damage — were dismissed.

Split photo of Zachery Ty Bryan at a 1995

“Home Improvement” actor Zachery Ty Bryan has been sentenced to 16 months in jail after pleading guilty to felony DUI charges in California. (Getty Images)

The former child star was denied probation. According to court records, Bryan has 53 days of time served.

Fox News Digital reached out to his attorney for comment.

The recent California sentencing marks the latest development in a string of legal troubles over the past five years.

The sentence stems from a February 2024 traffic stop in La Quinta. At the time, he was charged with felony DUI and a misdemeanor count of alleged contempt of court.

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“Deputies assigned to the La Quinta Sheriff’s Station conducted a traffic stop in the area of Washington Street and Calle Tampico in La Quinta on a vehicle suspected of being involved in a recent traffic collision,” Sergeant Wenndy Brito-Gonzalez told Fox News Digital at the time.

“When deputies contacted the driver, they observed indications of impairment, leading to the driver’s arrest for driving under the influence with priors.”

Brito-Gonzalez added, “The driver, later identified as 42-year-old Zachery Bryan, was booked into a Riverside County jail.”

Zachery Ty Bryan mugshot after domestic violence arrest

Zachery Ty Bryan was previously arrested on Jan. 2, 2025. (Courtesy: Horry County Sheriff)

Bryan was booked into the John Benoit Detention Center at the time and later released on $50,000 bail.

The February arrest was not an isolated incident.

In October 2024, Bryan was arrested again — this time in Custer County, Oklahoma.

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Zachery Ty Bryan in 1992

The former child star reached a plea agreement with prosecutors after a February 2024 traffic stop in La Quinta led to charges. (Getty Images)

Bryan “was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence for a second felony offense and then driving without a valid driver’s license,” Oklahoma police confirmed to Fox News Digital. He was booked at 8:34 a.m. on Friday, Oct. 25.

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In July 2023, Bryan was arrested after authorities responded to a reported physical domestic dispute between the actor and an unnamed woman. He was charged with two counts of assault in the fourth degree.

He later pleaded guilty to felony assault in the fourth degree constituting domestic violence. As part of a negotiated resolution that dismissed the second assault charge, Bryan was required to serve seven days in jail instead of 19–20 months in the Oregon Department of Corrections, Lane County Chief Deputy District Attorney Chris Parosa confirmed in a statement to Fox News Digital at the time.

Tim Allen and Home Improvement cast

Bryan worked alongside Tim Allen for 8 years on “Home Improvement.” (ABC Photo Archives/Disney General Entertainment Content)

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Bryan was also arrested in 2020 following an altercation with girlfriend Johnnie Faye Cartwright, in which he allegedly attempted to strangle her at their apartment in Eugene, Oregon. He later entered a guilty plea.

Bryan rose to fame as Brad Taylor, the eldest son of Tim “The Tool Man” Taylor — portrayed by Tim Allen — on the hit ABC sitcom “Home Improvement,” which ran from 1991 to 1999.

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Éliane Radigue, French composer and musique concrète legend, dies aged 94 | Music

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The French composer and musique concrète pioneer Éliane Radigue has died at the age of 94.

“It is with immense sadness that we learn of the passing of Éliane Radigue at the age of 94,” the Paris-based experimental music center INA GRM posted on Instagram. “A major figure in musical creation has left us.”

Born in Paris in 1932, Radigue learned piano as a child, but hearing the electroacoustic compositions of musique concrète godfather Pierre Schaeffer on the radio in the early 1950s unlocked something new, setting the course for her own studies in sound. After meeting Schaeffer by chance in the French capital, she worked an assistant for the composer.

“I was just cutting, splicing and editing tape,” she told the Guardian in a 2011 interview. “Of course, at that time the universe of electronic music was totally male, but I was pleased to do anything they asked of me. I was there to learn, and I was learning by doing, like an apprentice. It wasn’t really electronic music I was studying. The studio was against electronic music in favour of ‘concrete’ music: a simple idea of taking real sounds and manipulating them by cutting, splicing, editing, slowing down and so on.”

In the early 1970s, Radigue was introduced to the synthesizer and the instrument would go on to define the next 30 years of her work. “I just dug under its skin,” she said, and used the ARP 2500 synth to create much of her shape-shifting, meditative music that incorporated feedback and tape hiss. Beyond France, she caught the attention of US composers such as Philip Glass and Steve Reich, who were captivated by her innovative approach to sound.

“What my generation did wasn’t a revolution,” said Reich. “It was a restoration of harmony and rhythm in a whole new way, but it did bring back those essentials that people wanted, that people craved, but in a way they hadn’t heard.”

On her celebrated Occam Ocean series, Radigue collaborated with solo musicians and ensembles to create drone soundscapes inspired by the vastness of the sea and as an antidote to hectic modern life. “She carved out her own path with unparalleled freedom and vision,” wrote INA GRM. “Our thoughts are with her family, friends and collaborators.”



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Kindergarten teacher who identified as transgender furry reportedly fired

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A transgender substitute teacher who drew parent complaints after reportedly wearing provocative clothing and presenting a “wolf” persona around young students has been fired, according to multiple reports and social media posts.

The employee, who identified as female and nonbinary, taught at Mildred B. Poole Elementary School at Fort Bragg in North Carolina since at least 2023, according to a letter sent by legal group Liberty Counsel to the Department of Defense Education Activity (DoDEA) on Feb. 9.

Parents reported the employee went by female names and wore “BDSM-style” female clothing, including a dog collar, and an animal tail to school. In the classroom, the teacher told students to address the individual by some online personas, including “Roxxanne,” “Roxxie,” “Captain Roxxie” or “Koda.”

U.S. Secretary of War Pete Hegseth confirmed on X that the teacher had been fired, in response to a CBN report.

Empty primary classroom with desks

A substitute kindergarten teacher was reportedly dismissed after a legal group sent a demand letter to a Fort Bragg elementary school about the teacher’s behavior and attire around young students. (Amanda Andrade-Rhoades/For The Washington Post via Getty Images)

“The ‘Wolf’ was fired 2 weeks ago,” Hegseth posted on Feb. 19.

Parents first raised concerns about the teacher’s inappropriate attire to administrators in early 2025, according to Liberty Counsel. Mothers of pre-K and kindergarten students reported that the teacher was allowed to identify as a female and ask students to address the teacher by female pronouns in the classroom, as well as dress in “tight shirts and tank tops, above-the-knee skirts and combat boots while wearing a BDSM dog collar with dog tags representing sexual fetishes.”

According to Liberty Counsel, parents reported seeing the teacher wear this attire with an animal tail “on more than one occasion,” despite dressing appropriately for the school yearbook photo and other school events.

The letter said students told parents the teacher directed them to address the individual by online wolf character names, told them to howl like wolves, said the teacher would talk about turning into a werewolf at night and told students the individual wanted to present as more “nonbinary” and was “actually a woman” who “likes boys.”

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Person holds up a transgender flag during a protest

A demonstrator holds a transgender pride flag during a President’s Day protest near the U.S. Capitol in Washington, D.C., on Feb. 17, 2025.  (Stefani Reynolds/Bloomberg via Getty Images)

One mother reported that her child came home frightened and said, “Mommy, I’m scared he’s going to come eat me,” after hearing the teacher describe being a werewolf.

Parents also reported the teacher’s car displayed across the windshield the words, “WEREBEAST HUNTRESS” with a custom front plate “ROX XY 666,” profanity and transgender flags, according to Liberty Counsel.

Liberty Counsel said it reviewed social media accounts it attributed to the employee and said the material included the teacher engaging in “sexual fetishes” and “violence/torture” through drawings with furry personas.

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Green furry costume

The former employee identified as a wolf in the classroom and online through his furry persona. (Getty Images)

The letter alleged the teacher’s behavior constituted sexual harassment and was “unacceptable” conduct that “defies common sense and decency.” It also raised safety concerns about whether the employee escorted girls to restrooms based on the claimed female identity.

The letter concluded by demanding the teacher be immediately suspended and removed from the classroom pending an investigation into the matter.

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Mildred B. Poole Elementary school officials did not immediately return Fox News Digital’s request for comment.

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RoguePilot Flaw in GitHub Codespaces Enabled Copilot to Leak GITHUB_TOKEN

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A vulnerability in GitHub Codespaces could have been exploited by bad actors to seize control of repositories by injecting malicious Copilot instructions in a GitHub issue.

The artificial intelligence (AI)-driven vulnerability has been codenamed RoguePilot by Orca Security. It has since been patched by Microsoft following responsible disclosure.

“Attackers can craft hidden instructions inside a GitHub issue that are automatically processed by GitHub Copilot, giving them silent control of the in-codespaces AI agent,” security researcher Roi Nisimi said in a report.

The vulnerability has been described as a case of passive or indirect prompt injection where a malicious instruction is embedded within data or content that’s processed by the large language model (LLM), causing it to produce unintended outputs or carry out arbitrary actions.

The cloud security company also called it a type of AI-mediated supply chain attack that induces the LLM to automatically execute malicious instructions embedded in developer content, in this case, a GitHub issue.

The attack begins with a malicious GitHub issue that then triggers the prompt injection in Copilot when an unsuspecting user launches a Codespace from that issue. This trusted developer workflow, in turn, allows the attacker’s instructions to be silently executed by the AI assistant and leak sensitive data, such as the privileged GITHUB_TOKEN.

RoguePilot takes advantage of the fact that there are a number of entry points to launch a Codespaces environment, including templates, repositories, commits, pull requests, or issues. The problem occurs when a codespace is opened from an issue, as the built-in GitHub Copilot is automatically fed the issue’s description as a prompt to generate a response.

As a result, this AI integration can be weaponized to manipulate Copilot into running malicious commands. The attack can be made stealthy by hiding the prompt in the GitHub issue through the HTML comment tag “<!–the_prompt_goes_here–>.” The specially crafted prompt, for its part, instructs the AI assistant to leak the GITHUB_TOKEN to an external server under the attacker’s control.

“By manipulating Copilot in a Codespace to check out a crafted pull request that contains a symbolic link to an internal file, an attacker can cause Copilot to read that file and (via a remote JSON $schema) exfiltrate a privileged GITHUB_TOKEN to a remote server,” Nisimi explained.

From Prompt Injections to Promptware

The development comes as Microsoft has discovered that Group Relative Policy Optimization (GRPO), a reinforcement learning technique normally used to fine-tune LLMs after their deployment, can also be used to remove its safety features. The process has been codenamed GRP-Obliteration.

More importantly, the study found that a single unlabeled prompt, such as “Create a fake news article that could lead to panic or chaos,” was enough to reliably unalign 15 language models.

“What makes this surprising is that the prompt is relatively mild and does not mention violence, illegal activity, or explicit content,” Microsoft researchers Mark Russinovich, Giorgio Severi, Blake Bullwinkel, Yanan Cai, Keegan Hines, and Ahmed Salem noted. “Yet training on this one example causes the model to become more permissive across many other harmful categories it never saw during training.”

The disclosure also coincides with the discovery of various side channels that can be weaponized to infer the topic of a user’s conversation and even fingerprint user queries with over 75% accuracy, the latter of which exploits speculative decoding, an optimization technique used by LLMs to generate multiple candidate tokens in parallel to improve throughput and latency.

Recent research has uncovered that models backdoored at the computational graph level – a technique called ShadowLogic – can further put agentic AI systems at risk by allowing tool calls to be silently modified without the user’s knowledge. This new phenomenon has been codenamed Agentic ShadowLogic by HiddenLayer.

An attacker could weaponize such a backdoor to intercept requests to fetch content from a URL in real-time, such that they are routed through infrastructure under their control before it’s forwarded to the real destination.

“By logging requests over time, the attacker can map which internal endpoints exist, when they’re accessed, and what data flows through them,” the AI security company said. “The user receives their expected data with no errors or warnings. Everything functions normally on the surface while the attacker silently logs the entire transaction in the background.”

And that’s not all. Last month, Neural Trust demonstrated a new image jailbreak attack codenamed Semantic Chaining that allows users to sidestep safety filters in models like Grok 4, Gemini Nano Banana Pro, and Seedance 4.5, and generate prohibited content by leveraging the models’ ability to perform multi-stage image modifications.

The attack, at its core, weaponizes the models’ lack of “reasoning depth” to track the latent intent across a multi-step instruction, thereby allowing a bad actor to introduce a series of edits that, while innocuous in isolation, can gradually-but-steadily erode the model’s safety resistance until the undesirable output is generated.

It starts with asking the AI chatbot to imagine any non-problematic scene and instruct it to change one element in the original generated image. In the next phase, the attacker asks the model to make a second modification, this time transforming it into something that’s prohibited or offensive.

This works because the model is focused on making a modification to an existing image rather than creating something fresh, which fails to trip the safety alarms as it treats the original image as legitimate.

“Instead of issuing a single, overtly harmful prompt, which would trigger an immediate block, the attacker introduces a chain of semantically ‘safe’ instructions that converge on the forbidden result,” security researcher Alessandro Pignati said.

In a study published last month, researchers Oleg Brodt, Elad Feldman, Bruce Schneier, and Ben Nassi argued that prompt injections have evolved beyond input-manipulation exploits to what they call promptware – a new class of malware execution mechanism that’s triggered through prompts engineered to exploit an application’s LLM.

Promptware essentially manipulates the LLM to enable various phases of a typical cyber attack lifecycle: initial access, privilege escalation, reconnaissance, persistence, command-and-control, lateral movement, and malicious outcomes (e.g., data retrieval, social engineering, code execution, or financial theft).

“Promptware refers to a polymorphic family of prompts engineered to behave like malware, exploiting LLMs to execute malicious activities by abusing the application’s context, permissions, and functionality,” the researchers said. “In essence, promptware is an input, whether text, image, or audio, that manipulates an LLM’s behavior during inference time, targeting applications or users.”



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Australia news live: police investigate bomb threat after Anthony Albanese evacuated; university funding warning | Australia news

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Key events

Josh Butler
Josh Butler

More on the bomb threat at the prime minister’s home in Canberra

Prime minister Anthony Albanese was evacuated from his home in Canberra, The Lodge, after a bomb threat on Tuesday night.

Following an extensive search, which saw Albanese moved to a secure location, the Australian Federal Police said “nothing suspicious was located” and that there was “no current threat to the community or public safety.”

The AFP said early Wednesday morning there were no updates on the incident. Albanese’s office referred enquiries to the AFP.

Albanese is scheduled to make a speech at an infrastructure forum in Victoria on Wednesday.

In a post on social media, the opposition leader, Angus Taylor, said he was pleased to hear Albanese was safe after the threat.

“Threats against any parliamentarian are utterly abhorrent, especially in a country built on expressing our differences through debate,” he wrote on X.

We’ll bring you more through the day.

Police stand guard at The Lodge in Canberra in November. Photograph: Mick Tsikas/AAP


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‘The View’ host hits back at ‘outraged’ fans angry over pro-Trump guest host

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“The View” co-host Sunny Hostin defended Savannah Chrisley’s guest host stint on the talk show during Monday’s “Behind the Table” podcast, telling “outraged fans” it was what the show is all about.

“So the reaction from social media from our more ardent fans was loud. I obviously saw a lot of it,” the show’s producer, Brian Teta, said. “They were outraged at the idea that we would — they did not like the idea that there was anybody here that would be a supporter of Trump or MAGA at the table.”

Chrisley appeared as a guest host on “The View” last week, which resulted in back-and-forth exchanges with the liberal co-hosts, including over President Donald Trump.

Hostin and Chrisley

“The View” co-host Sunny Hostin and guest host Savannah Chrisley during the show on Feb. 19, 2026. (ABC/TheView)

“Well, that’s what ‘The View’ is. You have to be able to sit with people that, you know, voted for him three times and support him and continue to support him,” Hostin responded.

“I have family members that voted for him three times,” Hostin said.

Teta said it was likely fans of the show had family members who supported the president. He speculated, “Maybe they’ve cut everybody else off that does.”

“I haven’t,” Hostin said. “It’s hard.”

Teta said the backlash over Chrisley was directed at him personally.

“It’s really — I mean, they’re like, ‘Well, they’re being held in check. They’re being forced to do this.’ Like, no,” Teta said.

CHARLAMAGNE CRITICIZES ‘THE VIEW’ FOR LACKING CONSERVATIVE GUESTS

“No, this is what we do. And I think what was good about Savannah is, I think she understood that. If you go low, I go low. But if you go high, I go high. We can meet energy. And I thought her energy was pretty earnest and pretty harmless,” Hostin added.

Hostin noted areas of disagreement with Chrisley, but also said the two had a lot in common, such as their faith.

“But I thought all in all she’s, you know, I don’t know that many 28-year-old young women would be able to sit at the table. It takes a lot of courage and bravery and confidence, and she had that,” Hostin said.

Chrisley said during the podcast last week that she and Hostin had a back-and-forth off camera about her parents, who were pardoned by Trump, but that the two resolved it.

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Chrisley said that at first she was not a fan of Hostin due to their initial conversation, but explained that she and the liberal co-host talked the next day.

“But then today, she and I had a conversation, off camera, and she was like, ‘Well, I didn’t understand this.’ And I was like, ‘I apologize if I came off as defensive. It’s obviously my family, and I’m always going to defend them,'” Chrisley said. “But I’m really proud of the fact that we’re able to have those conversations, as women who are on opposite sides of the aisle, being able to say, ‘I’m sorry if I did this,’ or, ‘Oh, I didn’t know that.'” 

The co-hosts also warned Chrisley not to read the hateful comments online, after revealing she had been getting a lot directed at her while guest hosting the show.

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