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T20 World Cup: West Indies beat England by 30 runs to lead Group C | ICC Men’s T20 World Cup News

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Rutherford’s 76 and spinners’ control help the two-time champions beat the 2022 winners at the Wankhede Stadium.

Sherfane Rutherford struck ‌a belligerent half-century and Gudakesh Motie produced a brilliant display of spin bowling ⁠as West Indies ⁠thumped England by 30 runs in T20 World Cup Group C.

Rutherford smacked seven sixes in his unbeaten 76 off 42 deliveries to provide ⁠the bedrock of his team’s imposing total of 196-6 at the Wankhede Stadium in Mumbai on Wednesday.

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Twice champions West Indies returned to choke their opponents with spin and bundled out England for 166 in 19 overs ⁠to top the group with their second successive victory.

England slipped to third place, behind Scotland, after their first defeat in the tournament.

“Disappointing. It’s never nice to lose a game, but West Indies played outstanding,” England captain Harry Brook said.

“We thought it was a chaseable total, for ‌sure, but it didn’t dew up as much as we expected and didn’t skid onto the bat.”

Put into bat, West Indies lost both openers in the first seven deliveries of their innings.

Shimron Hetmyer (23) and Roston Chase (34) steadied the ship before Rutherford walked in to light up the Wankhede Stadium.

He shared a 61-run stand with Jason Holder, who struck four sixes in his 33 off 17 balls, to take West ⁠Indies close to 200.

Leg-spinner Adil Rashid excelled for England, conceding only ⁠16 runs in his four overs and claiming the wickets of Chase and Rovman Powell.

England made a flying start before losing Phil Salt (30) in the fourth over.

Chase removed Jos Buttler for 21 and left-arm spinner Motie ⁠produced a double strike to turn the heat on England, who slumped to 93-4 at the halfway stage of their innings.

The ⁠situation demanded caution, and Brook duly curbed his normal ⁠aggression, but the West Indian spinners would not be denied.

Motie (3-33) caught Brook off his own bowling, and Chase trapped Will Jacks lbw to further turn the screw.

Sam Curran made a valiant 43 not out down the order ‌but lacked support.

“I have put in a lot of work coming into the World Cup,” Rutherford said.

“I trust my process, and I can score runs in the end when ‌I ‌play with a clear mind. We were maybe 10 runs behind what we wanted, given England’s powerful batting, but the guys bowled well.”

INTERACTIVE -WINNERS- T20 MEN'S CRICKET WORLD CUP - 2026 - FEB3, 2026 copy-1770220851
(Al Jazeera)


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St Paul police say vehicle possibly pursued by federal agents crashes downtown

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A vehicle that was reportedly being pursued by federal agents crashed in St. Paul, Minnesota, on Wednesday, leaving one person with non-life-threatening injuries.

St. Paul Police said on Wednesday that officers were called to the intersection of Western and Selby Avenues at approximately 9:39 a.m. to respond to a vehicle crash. The department added that “it was reported that a large crowd had formed.”

“The preliminary information we received was that federal agents were pursuing a person in a vehicle when the vehicle crashed,” St. Paul Police said in a statement. “The person that was being pursued sustained non-life-threatening injuries and was transported to a local hospital by Saint Paul Fire medics.”

FEDS SHIFT TO TARGETED IMMIGRATION ENFORCEMENT IN MINNEAPOLIS UNDER HOMAN

Crowd and police around a car that has been in a car accident.

Onlookers surround the scene in downtown St. Paul on Wednesday after a vehicle believed to be pursued by federal agents crashes. (KMSP)

A witness who spoke to Fox News Digital on the condition of anonymity said there were approximately three or four cars involved in the crash and that there was a “huge protest” happening in the parking lot. Additionally, the person who spoke with Fox News Digital said she knew two of the people whose cars were involved and that one had just gone to grab a coffee at a local spot, while the other worked nearby.

Federal authorities have not confirmed any involvement. Neither U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) nor the Department of Homeland Security immediately responded to Fox News Digital’s request for comment.

Police cars and vehicle after a crash.

Vehicle crashes in downtown St. Paul on Wednesday during a suspected pursuit by federal immigration agents, prompting a large crowd to gather. (KMSP)

DEM SENATOR FUMES THAT GOP’S FOREIGN FUNDING CLAIM ‘DELEGITIMIZES’ ANGER OF ANTI-ICE AGITATORS IN US

Tensions between federal agents and locals in the St. Paul-Minneapolis area have flared for more than a month following the Jan. 7, 2026, fatal shooting of Renee Good. This was followed by the Jan. 24 fatal shooting of Alex Pretti, also at the hands of federal agents. Both deaths sparked protests and criticism from Minnesota leadership of the Trump administration’s handling of its illegal immigration crackdown in the state.

ICE agents standing.

A crowd gathered in downtown St. Paul on Wednesday after a vehicle believed to be pursued by federal immigration agents crashed. (KMSP)

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Border czar Tom Homan, who recently took over operations in the state, was aiming to deescalate the situation and even removed 700 immigration officers from the mission.



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Lawmakers want tighter chip tool curbs on China • The Register

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Banning sales to Chinese-government-affiliated companies, apparently, is not enough. A bipartisan group of American lawmakers this week called on the Trump administration to enact a blanket ban on the sale of equipment used in the production of advanced semiconductors to all of China.

In a letter to US Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick and Secretary of State Marco Rubio, the group of eight members of Congress argued that entity-specific trade restrictions were ineffective and called on the US government and its allies to enact countrywide trade restrictions on chipmaking kit.

“Critical gaps persist in our export control regime. … Certain foreign-produced chokepoint SME (semiconductor manufacturing equipment) is controlled only for certain specific entities in China, rather than on a countrywide basis,” they wrote. “Once equipment crosses the border into China, the US government has extremely limited ability to enforce end-use and end-user restrictions.”

The US has spent the better part of a decade now trying to kneecap China’s domestic semiconductor industry by limiting access to key chipmaking technologies like extreme and deep ultraviolet (EUV / DUV) lithography.

However, US export policy under the past two administrations has largely targeted specific companies like China’s Semiconductor Manufacturing International Corp (SMIC), rather than blocking sales at a country level.

“Entity-specific controls, while valuable, cannot substitute for countrywide restrictions on the most critical chokepoint tools,” they wrote. “We urge the administration to press allies to implement countrywide controls on key chokepoint semiconductor manufacturing equipment and subcomponents.” 

The lawmakers describe “chokepoint” equipment and subcomponents as those China lacks a domestic equivalent for.

However, because the semiconductor supply chain is so diverse, many key components are made outside the US, limiting its ability to police trade. To address this, the lawmakers argue that if US allies do not align on countrywide controls, Washington should be prepared to use US-origin component restrictions to close the gaps itself.

“The United States should be prepared to act to close remaining gaps itself if necessary, including by prohibiting the use of US-origin components in the production of chokepoint tools destined to China,” the letter reads.

Equipment manufactured by the likes of the Netherlands’ ASML appears to be of particular concern for the group.

“Dutch sales to China of advanced lithography equipment — the most important chokepoint in the supply chain — doubled from 2022 to 2023 and again from 2023 to 2024,” the lawmakers wrote. “Each chokepoint tool that enters China represents a permanent loss of American leverage.”

In addition to barring sales of chipmaking gear, the lawmakers also want the Trump administration to crack down on companies that continue to service existing equipment now subject to trade restrictions in the region.

The lawmakers also warn that time is of the essence as China is working to build its homegrown chipmaking tech.

“Left unchecked, China could render US and allied export controls irrelevant by replacing foreign chipmaking tools entirely,” they said.

We’ll note that this kind of thing does tend to happen when a nation is cut off from a critical technology, but reading between the lines, the argument seems to be that the US’ failure to effectively police foreign chipmaking equipment is buying time for the Chinese to build their own. ®



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Thousands celebrate 47th anniversary of Iran’s Islamic Revolution | Israel-Iran conflict

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Rallies across Iran marked the 47th anniversary of the Islamic Revolution, with many people expressing their solidarity with the government and concern over new diplomatic efforts with the US.



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Trump Religious Liberty commission ousts Catholic activist Carrie Prejean Boller

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President Donald Trump‘s White House Religious Liberty Commission ousted Catholic activist Carrie Prejean Boller from its membership on Wednesday, after her controversial performance at a hearing on antisemitism this week.

Texas Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick, who chairs the commission, announced Boller’s removal on Wednesday, arguing she had attempted to “hijack” Tuesday’s public hearing for a “political agenda.” Boller was combative during the hearing and defended commentator Candace Owens, who has been accused of antisemitism over a number of controversial remarks, among others.

“Carrie Prejean Boller has been removed from President Trump’s Religious Liberty Commission,” Patrick wrote in a statement on X. “No member of the Commission has the right to hijack a hearing for their own personal and political agenda on any issue. This is clearly, without question, what happened Monday in our hearing on antisemitism in America. This was my decision.”

Prior to her forced removal, Boller issued a series of statements refusing to resign her position on Tuesday and Wednesday.

GABBARD SLAMS DEMOCRATS’ ‘HOSTILITY TOWARDS GOD,’ CONDEMNS ANTI-ICE AGITATORS WHO STORMED CHURCH

Miss California Carrie Prejean takes part in the finale at the Dove awards in Nashville, Tenn., Thursday, April 23, 2009. The Dove awards honor Christian and gospel music. (AP Photo/Mark Humphrey)

Former Miss California Carrie Prejean Boller has been removed from the White House Religious Liberty Commission. (AP)

“I will never bend the knee to the state of Israel. Ever,” Boller, a former Miss California, posted on X. “Christians have been manipulated into believing that God blesses bombing, starvation, and mass killing. That is the opposite of Christ, who came to stand with the suffering and confront power. I reject that lie completely.”

CHABAD OFFICIAL SPEAKS OUT AFTER CAR-RAMMING OF JEWISH CENTER, AS NYPD PROBES MOTIVE

Texas Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick

Lieutenant Governor of Texas Dan Patrick announced Boller’s removal on Wednesday. (REUTERS/David ‘Dee’ Delgado)

Boller got into a heated exchange with Shabbos Kestenbaum, a former Harvard student who sued the university over its response to antisemitism, who testified at the hearing. After Kestenbaum spoke about antisemitism, Boller steered the hearing towards Israel, asking Kestenbaum if he would “condemn what Israel has done in Gaza.” While Kestenbaum was ready to respond, Chairman Patrick brought that line of questioning to a halt and said, “This can be another discussion on another day.”

Owens came to Boller’s defense after Patrick announced her dismissal on Wednesday, claiming the White House commission was pushing a “performative Zionist” message “meant to neuter the Christian faith.”

MAMDANI PLEDGED TO FIGHT FOR ALL BUT SCRAPPED ORDER JEWISH STUDENTS SAY PROTECTED THEM

“Carrie didn’t hijack anything,” Owens wrote. “Carrie spoke truth, as a Catholic, and Christians, the Truth cannot be defeated. Zionists are naturally hostile to Catholics because we refuse to bend the knee to revisionist history and support the mass slaughter and rape of innocent children for occult Baal worshipers.”

President Trump bows his head in prayer

President Donald Trump created the commission soon after his inauguration last year. (Saul Loeb/AFP via Getty Images)

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“Your decision will only further the Christian enlightenment which is taking place in this country. And for that, we thank you,” Owens wrote to Patrick.



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Why your AI doctor doesn’t follow HIPAA: The hidden risks of medical chatbots

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AI apps are making their way into healthcare. It’s not clear that rigorous data security or privacy practices will be part of the package.

OpenAI, Anthropic and Google have all rolled out AI-powered health offerings from over the past year. These products are designed to provide health and wellness advice to individual users or organizations, helping to diagnose their illnesses, examine medical records and perform a host of other health-related functions.

OpenAI says that hundreds of millions of people already use ChatGPT to answer health and wellness questions, and studies have found that large language models can be remarkably proficient at medical diagnostics, with one paper calling their capabilities “superhuman” when compared to a human doctor.

But in addition to traditional cybersecurity concerns around how well these chatbots can protect personal health data, there are a host of questions around what kind of legal protections users would have around the personal medical data they share with these apps. Several health care and legal experts told CyberScoop that these companies are almost certainly not subject to the same legal or regulatory requirements – such as data protection rules under the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act (HIPAA) – that compel hospitals and other healthcare facilities to ensure protection of your data.

Sara Geoghegan, senior counsel at the Electronic Privacy Information Center, said offering the same or similar data protections as part of a terms of service agreement is markedly different from interacting with a regulated healthcare entity. 

“On a federal level there are no limitations – generally, comprehensively – on non-HIPAA protected information or consumer information being sold to third parties, to data brokers,” she said. 

She also pointed to data privacy concerns that stemmed from the bankruptcy and sale of genetic testing company 23andMe last year as a prime example of the dangers consumers face when handing over their sensitive health or biometric data to a unregulated entity.

In many cases, these AI health apps carry the same kind of security and privacy risks as other generative AI products: data leakage, hallucinations, prompt injections and a propensity to give confident but wrong answers.

Additionally, data breaches in the healthcare industry have become increasingly common over the past several years, even before the current AI boom. Healthcare organizations are frequent targets for hacking, phishing, and ransomware, and even though companies can be held legally responsible under HIPAA for failing to protect patient data, breaches still happen because many systems rely on outdated software, depend on numerous outside vendors, and struggle to keep up with the cost and complexity of strong cybersecurity.

Carter Groome, CEO of First Health Advisory, a healthcare and cybersecurity risk management consulting firm, said that beyond concerns over whether these tech companies can even reasonably promise to protect your health data, it’s also not clear their security protections are anything more than a company policy.

“They’re not mandated by HIPAA,” Groome said. “Organizations that are building apps, there’s a real gray area for any sort of compliance” with health care data privacy laws.

Privacy is especially important in health and medicine, both for protecting sensitive medical information and for building trust in the health system overall. That’s why hospitals, doctor’s offices, lab testing facilities and other associated entities have been subject to heightened laws and regulations around protecting patient records and other health data.

Laws like HIPAA require covered entities and their business associates to “maintain reasonable and appropriate administrative, physical, and technical safeguards for the security of certain individually identifiable health information.”

It also subjects companies to breach notification rules that force them to notify victims, the Department of Health and Human Services and in some cases the public when certain health data has been accessed, acquired, used or disclosed in a data breach.

Groome and Andrew Crawford, senior counsel at Center for Democracy and Technology’s Data and Privacy Project, said that tech companies like OpenAI, Anthropic and Google almost certainly would not be considered covered entities under HIPAA’s security rule, which according to HHS applies to health plans, clearinghouses, health care providers and business associates who transfer Electronic Protected Health Information (ePHI). 

OpenAI and Anthropic do not claim that ChatGPT Health or Claude for Healthcare follow HIPAA. Anthropic’s web site describes Claude for Healthcare as “built on HIPAA-ready infrastructure,” while OpenAI’s page for its suite of healthcare-related enterprise products claims they “support” HIPAA compliance.

OpenAI, Anthropic and Google did not respond to a request for comment from CyberScoop. 

That distinction means “that a number of companies not bound by HIPAA’s privacy protections will be collecting, sharing, and using peoples’ health data,” Crawford said in a statement to CyberScoop. “And since it’s up to each company to set the rules for how health data is collected, used, shared, and stored, inadequate data protections and policies can put sensitive health information in real danger.”

Laws like HIPAA contain strong privacy protections for health data but are limited in scope and “meant to help the digitization of records, not stop tech companies from gathering your health data outside of the doctor’s office,” Geoghegan said.

As they expand into healthcare, tech companies like OpenAI, Anthropic, and Google have emphasized data security as a top priority in their product launches.

OpenAI said their health model uses an added layer of built encryption and isolation features to compartmentalize health conversations, as well as added features like multifactor authentication. And, like other OpenAI models, ChatGPT Health encrypts its data at rest and in transit, has a feature to delete chats within 30 days and promises your data won’t be used for AI training.

For uploading medical records, OpenAI said it is partnering with b.well, an AI-powered digital health platform that connects health data for U.S. patients. On its website, the company says “it uses a transparent, consumer-friendly privacy policy that lets users control and change data-sharing permissions at any time, does not sell personal data, and only shares it without permission in limited cases. It also voluntarily follows the CARIN Alliance Trust Framework and Code of Conduct—making it accountable to the FTC—and says it aims to meet or exceed HIPAA standards through measures like encryption, regular security reviews, and HITRUST and NIST CSF certifications, though it notes no system can fully eliminate cyber risk.

Legal experts say that when tech companies promise their AI products are “HIPAA compliant” or “HIPAA ready,” it’s often unclear whether these claims amount to anything more than a promise not to use health data irresponsibly. 

These distinctions matter when it comes to personal health data. Geoghegan said it is not uncommon in some corners of the wellness industry for an unregulated business to ambiguously claim they are “HIPAA-compliant” to elude the fact that they aren’t legally bound by the regulations.

“Generally speaking, a lot of companies say they’re HIPAA compliant, but what they mean is that they’re not a HIPAA regulated entity, therefore they have no obligation,” said Geoghegan.

Groome suggested that AI companies are being “hyperbolic” in their commitment to security in an effort to assuage the concerns of privacy critics, noting that their product announcements contain “a comical level of how much they say they’re going to protect your information.”

An added wrinkle is that AI tools remain black boxes in some respects, with even their developers unable to fully understand or explain how they work. That kind of uncertainty, especially with healthcare data, can lead to bad security or privacy outcomes.

“It’s really shaky right now when a company comes out and says ‘we’re fully HIPAA compliant’ and I think what they’re doing is trying to give the consumer a false sense of trust,” said Groome.

Several sources told CyberScoop that despite these risks, they expect AI health apps to continue being widely used, in part because the traditional American healthcare system remains so expensive.  

AI tools – by contrast – are convenient, immediate and cost effective. While people like Geoghegan and Groome have said they are sympathetic to the pressures that push people towards these apps, the tradeoffs are troubling.

“A lot of this stems from the fact that care is inaccessible, it’s hard to get and it’s expensive, and there are many reasons why people don’t trust in health care provisions,” said Geoghegan. “But the solution to that care being inaccessible cannot be relying on big tech and billionaire’s products. We just can’t trust [them] to have our best health interest in mind.”

Derek B. Johnson

Written by Derek B. Johnson

Derek B. Johnson is a reporter at CyberScoop, where his beat includes cybersecurity, elections and the federal government. Prior to that, he has provided award-winning coverage of cybersecurity news across the public and private sectors for various publications since 2017. Derek has a bachelor’s degree in print journalism from Hofstra University in New York and a master’s degree in public policy from George Mason University in Virginia.



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Australia politics live: Liberals wait for leadership spill after Angus Taylor’s resignation | Australia news

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Good morning

Krishani Dhanji
Krishani Dhanji

Good morning, Krishani Dhanji here with you for the final sitting day of the week – and perhaps Sussan Ley’s last sitting day as the leader of the opposition.

After weeks (if not months) of speculation, Angus Taylor finally pulled the trigger last night by announcing his resignation from the frontbench. Some of his close allies in the conservative faction will likely follow him today.

Senate estimates continues and, while the heat’s been on the opposition more than the government this week, we’ll bring you everything you need to know from there.

And as Martin mentioned earlier, the prime minister will deliver his Closing the Gap speech later this morning.

It’s going to be another busy one, stay with us!

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Leadership challenge ‘undercooked, ill prepared’: Wallace

Andrew Wallace is out to bat for Sussan Ley again this morning (in what would be a pretty tight interview turnaround after appearing on Sky News late last night!)

Speaking to ABC News Breakfast this morning, Wallace reiterates that Ley hasn’t been given a proper chance as leader to succeed. Yesterday other allies said it would be right to allow Ley at least give the budget reply in May as leader.

Like Ley told colleagues at Tuesday’s party room meeting, Wallace says that “disunity is death”, and adds that at a time where the Liberal party is trying to chase with women voters, knifing the first female leader is probably not a great look

I think this, this leadership challenge, if it ends up being that, has been undercooked, I think it’s been unprepared or ill prepared, I think Susan has the numbers. I think that the majority of the party room believe that Susan hasn’t been given a fair go,

I quite honestly believe that Sussan hasn’t been afforded a reasonable opportunity to succeed, and I want to back her in and make sure that she does, so that we can continue to take the fight up to Labor.

Sussan, of course, is our first female leader. I think it sends a bad message to Australians.



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Senate Republicans push voter ID SAVE Act despite facing long odds

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Senate Republicans face long odds in advancing voter ID legislation, but they’re not backing down.

Huddled behind closed doors on Tuesday, GOP lawmakers attempted to chart a path forward on the Safeguarding American Voter Eligibility (SAVE) America Act, a revamped version of election integrity legislation that has long gathered dust in Congress.

A trio of hardliner conservatives — Sens. Mike Lee of Utah, Ron Johnson of Wisconsin and Rick Scott of Florida — have championed the legislation and demanded that it be considered in the upper chamber.

MURKOWSKI BREAKS WITH GOP ON VOTER ID, SAYS PUSH ‘IS NOT HOW WE BUILD TRUST’

Sen. Mike Lee, R-Utah, walks through the Senate subway.

Sen. Mike Lee, R-Utah, is leading the push in the Senate to pass voter ID legislation, and pitching multiple paths that Republicans could take to do it.  (Bill Clark/CQ-Roll Call, Inc via Getty Images)

Lee gave what lawmakers who attended the meeting described as an impassioned plea to move ahead with the bill, which would require voters to show identification, mandate in-person proof of citizenship when registering and direct states to remove non-citizens from voter rolls.

“Nothing in the Senate’s an easy move,” Lee said after the meeting. “This one’s certainly not. But if we want to do this, this is how we have to go about it.”

Indeed, Senate Democrats won’t support the legislation. That means the 60-vote filibuster threshold is, for now, an impossible barrier to breach.

REPUBLICANS, TRUMP RUN INTO SENATE ROADBLOCK ON VOTER ID BILL

Senate Majority Whip John Barrasso, R-Wyo., speaks during a press conference.

Senate Majority Whip John Barrasso, R-Wyo., wants Republicans to keep pressing voter ID legislation, and noted how prevalent showing ID is in everyday life.  (Nathan Posner/Anadolu via Getty Images)

Senate Majority Whip John Barrasso, R-Wyo., told Fox News Digital that Republicans would continue to press the voter ID issue as common sense, given how prevalent identification is across several aspects of daily life.

“To get on an airplane you need a photo ID. You want to buy a beer at a football game? You need a photo ID. Go to the library, you need a photo ID for just about everything,” Barrasso said. “And now you see Democrats are demanding photo IDs to go to any meetings that they have, and we just saw that in Georgia.”

But Democratic resistance and moderate GOP Sen. Lisa Murkowski’s rejection of the legislation leave two options, which Lee and others pitched to their colleagues — nuke the filibuster or turn to the standing, or talking, filibuster.

Senate Majority Leader John Thune, R-S.D., immediately threw cold water on the former.

SCHUMER NUKES GOP PUSH FOR ‘JIM CROW-ERA’ VOTER ID LAWS IN TRUMP-BACKED SHUTDOWN PACKAGE

Sen. Rick Scott, R-Fla.

Sen. Rick Scott, R-Fla., said that all options were on the table to pass voter ID legislation, including turning to the original version of the filibuster.  (Bill Clark/CQ-Roll Call, Inc via Getty Images)

“It’s not just me not being willing to do it. There aren’t anywhere close to the votes — not even close — to nuking the filibuster,” Thune said. “And so that idea is something, although it continues to be put out there, is something that doesn’t have a future.”

“So is there another way of getting there? We’ll see,” he continued.

In lieu of nuking the filibuster, which Trump has asked Senate Republicans to do throughout his second term, the GOP is considering turning to the standing filibuster, which existed before the modern 60-vote threshold.

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The modern filibuster is less strenuous than the standing filibuster, which requires lawmakers to debate on the floor. That route could paralyze the upper chamber for hundreds of hours.

Scott told Fox News Digital that during the meeting his colleagues were “starting to understand” the standing filibuster, but noted that not everyone was on board yet.

“I think we ought to look at all of our options to get it passed, whether it’s the talking filibuster or whatever it is, to make sure elections are secure,” Scott said. “So I’m not going to give up.”



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Crazy ransomware gang abuses employee monitoring tool in attacks

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Hacker monitoring employees

A member of the Crazy ransomware gang is abusing legitimate employee monitoring software and the SimpleHelp remote support tool to maintain persistence in corporate networks, evade detection, and prepare for ransomware deployment.

The breaches were observed by researchers at Huntress, who investigated multiple incidents where threat actors deployed Net Monitor for Employees Professional alongside SimpleHelp for remote access to a breached network, while blending in with normal administrative activity.

In one intrusion, attackers installed Net Monitor for Employees Professional using the Windows Installer utility, msiexec.exe, allowing them to deploy the monitoring agent on compromised systems directly from the developer’s site.

Wiz

Once installed, the tool allowed attackers to remotely view the victim’s desktop, transfer files, and execute commands, effectively providing full interactive access to compromised systems.

The attackers also attempted to enable the local administrator account using this command:


net user administrator /active:yes

For redundant persistence, attackers downloaded and installed the SimpleHelp remote access client via PowerShell commands, using file names similar to the legitimate Visual Studio vshost.exe.

The payload was then executed, allowing attackers to maintain remote access even if the employee monitoring tool was removed.

The SimpleHelp binary was sometimes disguised using filenames that pretended to be related to OneDrive:


C:\ProgramData\OneDriveSvc\OneDriveSvc.exe

The attackers used the monitoring software to execute commands remotely, transfer files, and monitor system activity in real time.

Researchers also observed the attackers disabling Windows Defender by attempting to stop and delete associated services.

Disabling Windows Defender
Disabling Windows Defender
Source: Huntress

In one incident, the hackers configured monitoring rules in SimpleHelp to alert them when devices accessed cryptocurrency wallets or were using remote management tools as they prepared for ransomware deployment and potential cryptocurrency theft.

“The logs show the agent continuously cycling through trigger and reset events for cryptocurrency-related keywords, including wallet services (metamask, exodus, wallet, blockchain), exchanges (binance, bybit, kucoin, bitrue, poloniex, bc.game, noones), blockchain explorers (etherscan, bscscan), and the payment platform payoneer,” explains Huntress.

“Alongside these, the agent also monitored for remote access tool keywords, including RDP, anydesk, ultraview, teamview, and VNC, likely to detect if anyone was actively connecting to the machine.”

Keywords monitored by SimpleHelp agent
Keywords monitored by SimpleHelp agent
Source: Huntress

The use of multiple remote access tools provided redundancy for the attackers, ensuring they retained access even if one tool was discovered or removed.

While only one incident led to the deployment of Crazy ransomware, Huntress believes the same threat actor is behind both incidents.

“The same filename (vhost.exe) and overlapping C2 infrastructure were reused across both cases, strongly suggesting a single operator or group behind both intrusions,” explains Huntress.

The use of legitimate remote management and monitoring tools has become increasingly common in ransomware intrusions, as these tools allow attackers to blend in with legitimate network traffic.

Huntress warns that organizations should closely monitor for unauthorized installations of remote monitoring and support tools.

Furthermore, as both breaches were enabled through compromised SSL VPN credentials, organizations need to enforce MFA on all remote access services used to access the network.

Modern IT infrastructure moves faster than manual workflows can handle.

In this new Tines guide, learn how your team can reduce hidden manual delays, improve reliability through automated response, and build and scale intelligent workflows on top of tools you already use.



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Congresswoman presses Pam Bondi to apologise to Epstein victims | Politics

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US Congresswoman Pramila Jayapal pressed Attorney General Pam Bondi to apologise to Jeffrey Epstein victims for her department’s widely criticised handling of sensitive documents. Bondi accused the lawmaker of dragging her “into the gutter” for the sake of “theatrics.”



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