LATEST ARTICLES

NYPD officers hailed as heroes for chasing terror suspects near Gracie Mansion

0

NEWYou can now listen to Fox News articles!

Two veteran NYPD officers say it was “instinct” that led them to charge toward smoldering IEDs during a suspected terror attack near Gracie Mansion last weekend.

NYPD Chief Aaron Edwards and Sgt. Luis Navarro ran toward danger when 18-year-old Amir Balat and 19-year-old Ibrahim Qayyumi allegedly threw explosives into a crowd. A photo that later went viral captured the moment Edwards leaped over a police barricade in pursuit of one of the ISIS-inspired suspects.

“They say when you’re a cop, no two days are alike, but this was like no other day,” Edwards told Fox News on Thursday, adding, “We just immediately began running towards this threat.” 

Both officers joined the force in the wake of the Sept. 11th terror attacks. Navarro said there was no time to think, only a drive to protect the public.

CNN REPORTER DELETES POST FALSELY CALLING MAMDANI ‘TARGET OF POLITICAL VIOLENCE’ IN LATEST FOUL-UP

NYC officials address explosive device incident.

New York City Mayor Zohran Mamdani speaks alongside Police Commissioner Jessica Tisch during a news conference at Gracie Mansion in New York City on Monday.  (Leonardo Munoz/AFP via Getty Images)

“I went straight on instinct. There was nothing that I could have thought about. There was no moment there where I could just say, hold on, slow down time, and just wait and see what I have,” said Navarro. 

ISIS-INSPIRED NYC BOMB SUSPECTS COULD FACE DEATH PENALTY, EX-FBI AGENT SAYS

“I just know that as soon as, you know, the event started unfolding, I needed to save as many people as I could,” he added. 

The officers are being hailed as heroes for their bravery. Former NYPD Chief John Chell joined “Fox & Friends” on Thursday to praise the duo alongside retired Lt. Joe Cardinale and Blue Lives Matter co-founder Joe Imperatrice.

NYPD Bomb Squad officers examine a vehicle in New York City during an investigation linked to an attempted explosive attack.

NYPD Bomb Squad officers search a car allegedly belonging to an individual who attempted to throw a homemade explosive at police officers on Sunday in New York City. (Ryan Murphy/Getty)

“It’s not a normal thing to run towards IEDs, and the chief, the sergeant… [and] all those cops converged to save people, and it was selfless act of bravery,” Chell said Thursday. 

“They’re all heroes. And thank God, those IEDs did not explode because they would have lost their lives, and that’s where people have to understand.”

HERO NYPD OFFICERS HONORED FOR FOILING ALLEGED ISIS-INSPIRED TERROR PLOT NEAR GRACIE MANSION

Other officers converged to contain and apprehend the pair before the devices could detonate. Their actions helped secure the area and take the suspects into custody before anyone was injured.

“It’s a great look for the NYPD. It’s good for recruitment,” Cardinale said of the officers. 

Suspect running away from Gracie Mansion in NYC

A suspect involved in the terror plot runs away after he allegedly threw an explosive. (United States District Court for the Southern District of New York)

“We hope it inspires others to get out there. The job needs that right now. They need heroes like this.”

CLICK HERE TO DOWNLOAD THE FOX NEWS APP

Imperatrice pointed out that incidents like the attempted bombing highlight the everyday risks officers face, even when the outcome doesn’t end in tragedy.

“People don’t realize that at the end of the day, this is one of the most dangerous jobs out there, and when officers leave their homes, they may not come home. So we shouldn’t just need an incident like this that goes on the news to start respecting our cops, which should be happening every single day.”



Source link

Rust-Based VENON Malware Targets 33 Brazilian Banks with Credential-Stealing Overlays

0

Ravie LakshmananMar 12, 2026Malware / Cybercrime

Rust-Based VENON Malware

Cybersecurity researchers have disclosed details of a new banking malware targeting Brazilian users that’s written in Rust, marking a significant departure from other known Delphi-based malware families associated with the Latin American cybercrime ecosystem.

The malware, which is designed to infect Windows systems and was first discovered last month, has been codenamed VENON by Brazilian cybersecurity company ZenoX.

What makes VENON notable is that it shares behaviors that are consistent with established banking trojans targeting the region, such as Grandoreiro, Mekotio, and Coyote, specifically when it comes to features like banking overlay logic, active window monitoring, and a shortcut (LNK) hijacking mechanism.

The malware has not been attributed to any previously documented group or campaign. However, an earlier version of the artifact, dating back to January 2026, has been found to expose full paths from the malware author’s development environment. The paths repeatedly reference a Windows machine username “byst4” (e.g., “C:\Users\byst4\…”).

“The Rust code structure presents patterns suggesting a developer familiar with the capabilities of existing Latin American banking trojans, but who used generative AI to rewrite and expand these functionalities in Rust, a language that requires significant technical experience to use at the observed level of sophistication,” ZenoX said.

VENON is distributed by means of a sophisticated infection chain that uses DLL side-loading to launch a malicious DLL. It’s suspected that the campaign leverages social engineering ploys like ClickFix to trick users into downloading a ZIP archive containing the payloads by means of a PowerShell script.

Once the DLL is executed, it performs nine evasion techniques, including anti-sandbox checks, indirect syscalls, ETW bypass, AMSI bypass, before actually initiating any malicious actions. It also reaches out to a Google Cloud Storage URL to retrieve a configuration, install a scheduled task, and establish a WebSocket connection to the command-and-control (C2) server.

Also extracted from the DLL are two Visual Basic Script blocks that implement a shortcut hijacking mechanism exclusively targeting the Itaú banking application. The components work by replacing the legitimate system shortcuts with tampered versions that redirect the victim to a web page under the threat actor’s control.

The attack also supports an uninstall step to undo the modifications, suggesting that the operation can be remotely controlled by the operator to restore the shortcuts to what they originally were to cover up the tracks.

In all, the banking malware is equipped to target 33 financial institutions and digital asset platforms by monitoring the window title and active browser domain, springing into action only when any of the targeted applications or websites are opened to facilitate credential theft by serving fake overlays.

The disclosure comes amid campaigns where threat actors are exploiting the ubiquity of WhatsApp in Brazil to distribute a worm named SORVEPOTEL via the messaging platform’s desktop web version. The attack hinges on abusing previously authenticated chats to deliver malicious lures directly to victims, ultimately resulting in the deployment of banking malware such as Maverick, Casbaneiro, or Astaroth.

“A single WhatsApp message delivered through a hijacked SORVEPOTEL session was sufficient to draw a victim into a multi-stage chain that ultimately resulted in an Astaroth implant running fully in memory,” Blackpoint Cyber said.

“The combination of local automation tooling, unsupervised browser drivers, and user-writable runtimes created an unusually permissive environment, allowing both the worm and the final payload to establish themselves with minimal friction.”



Source link

Israel attacks central Beirut in escalation of deadly assault on Lebanon | Israel attacks Lebanon News

0

Israel targets centre of Lebanese capital in escalation of military campaign that has killed nearly 700 people.

Israel has carried out a new wave of attacks on the Lebanese capital, Beirut, sending enormous plumes of black smoke billowing up over parts of the city.

The latest Israeli strikes on Thursday targeted central Beirut’s Bashoura neighbourhood as well as the southern suburbs.

Recommended Stories

list of 3 itemsend of list

The Israeli military also issued a warning to evacuate a building in Zuqaq al-Blat, another area in the city centre.

The targeting of central Beirut marks an escalation in a week and a half of intensified Israeli bombing across Lebanon, which has killed at least 687 people and wounded more than 1,500, according to the Lebanese Ministry of Public Health.

Lebanese authorities said more than 800,000 people have been forcibly displaced due to the violence, which began on March 2 after Hezbollah launched rockets towards Israeli territory following the start of the United States-Israeli war on Iran.

The Israeli military has launched a widespread aerial and ground assault against its northern neighbour, describing the offensive as a campaign against Hezbollah.

The Lebanese armed group has responded with waves of rocket strikes against Israel, including a large salvo that was launched on Wednesday evening in coordination with Iran.

The United Nations and humanitarian groups said Lebanese civilians – including hundreds of thousands who have sought emergency shelter after being forced out of their homes – are bearing the brunt of the escalating conflict.

Many of those who were forced to flee southern Lebanon and Beirut’s southern suburbs, an area known as Dahiyeh, have been staying in schools-turned-shelters, with relatives or in tents along the waterfront.

At least 12 people were killed in an Israeli double-tap strike earlier on Thursday in the seafront area of Ramlet al-Baida, where displaced families were sleeping in tents.

Al Jazeera’s Bernard Smith said 90 percent of government shelters in Lebanon are full.

“People who are in those shelters have already seen their homes blown up, particularly those from the southern suburbs [of Beirut] and southern Lebanon, so they don’t have homes to go back to,” Smith reported from the capital.

“Many people are day labourers [and] can’t earn any salary. So people are without money, without a home to go back to, and this campaign of Israel’s and this fight between Israel and Hezbollah show no indication of ending soon.”



Source link

Journalist loses nearly $10,000 in year-long gambling experiment

0

NEWYou can now listen to Fox News articles!

A prominent journalist lost nearly $10,000 gifted from his employer as an experiment to cover gambling in America and the pitfalls of the growing sports-betting industry.

The Atlantic staff writer McKay Coppins penned a lengthy feature, “Sucker: My year as a degenerate gambler,” in which the suburban dad and practicing Mormon “prohibited from indulging in games of chance,” was given $10,000 by the publication to wager during the 2025 NFL season. Since the cash belonged to The Atlantic, it did not interfere with his religious constraints, and the magazine planned to cover his losses and split any winnings with him in order to ensure his “emotional investment.”

Coppins, who consulted his bishop to make sure the arrangement wasn’t frowned upon, had heard plenty of stories about American men who let an “initially modest gambling habit” upend their lives and families. In his feature, he laid out how gambling became a near-obsession for him.

VIRGINIA DEMS TAKE TAX HIKES INTO OVERTIME, TARGET FANTASY FOOTBALL LEAGUES

McKay Coppins

The Atlantic staff writer McKay Coppins penned a feature about his experiment with gambling. (Lloyd Bishop/NBC via Getty Images)

“With the door locked behind me, I pulled out my phone and downloaded the DraftKings betting app,” he wrote of his first bet. “I felt a certain thrill as I typed in my debit-card information and deposited $500. The first game of the NFL season was a few minutes away. Anything seemed possible.”

Coppins previously thought gambling was a “waste of time,” but was well aware that made him an outlier. 

“Since 2018, Americans have wagered more than half a trillion dollars on sports, and roughly half of men ages 18 to 49 have an active account with an online sportsbook,” Coppins wrote.

His first time wagering was during a game between the Philadelphia Eagles and Dallas Cowboys, an experience he called “strangely mesmerizing.” 

“For 200 bucks, I had purchased an artificial rooting interest in a game I had no reason to care about. I kept watching even after a weather delay pushed it late into the night, scrolling frenetically next to my sleeping wife in search of angles to exploit with late-game bets,” Coppins wrote. 

JONTAY PORTER, ISSUED A LIFETIME BAN BY THE NBA FOR GAMBLING, MAKES PRO BASKETBALL COMEBACK IN USBL

McKay Coppins

McKay Coppins lost nearly $10,000 of The Atlantic’s money during a year-long gambling experiment.  (Skip Bolen/Getty Images)

He lost a few bets but hit a prop parlay and finished the night up a whopping $20. 

He explained that the opening-night profit resulted in daydreaming inside the Coppins household and tried not to dwell on the bishop cautioning him to “be careful.” He studied up on the history of gambling in society, sought advice from famed data analyst Nate Silver and kept at it. 

“One rainy evening, I found myself parked outside a big-box store in Northern Virginia where my wife had sent me on an errand, obsessively scavenging for lines on my phone and jotting down favorites in my Notes app. When I looked up, 45 minutes had passed. I would be late for dinner,” Coppins wrote. 

“Doing all of this homework heightened my investment in the games,” he added. “But it also conjured something disconcerting and primal in me.”

He explained that a tough loss, or “bad beat,” caused him to despise the player responsible, and he became “unnerved” by the intensity it caused him to feel. 

TENNIS PLAYERS RECEIVE THREATENING MESSAGES, INCLUDING PHOTOS OF A GUN, DEMANDING THEY LOSE MATCHES

Jalen Hurts runs from a tackler

McKay Coppins’ first time wagering was during a 2025 game between the Philadelphia Eagles and Dallas Cowboys, an experience he called “strangely mesmerizing.” (Chris Szagola/AP Photo)

“I was surprised at how quickly and extensively the experiment was bleeding into the rest of my life,” Coppins wrote, explaining that his family quickly accused him of being addicted. 

It irritated his wife as watching sports late into the night became a habit, and even his own boss wondered if it was affecting his mental health.

“Four months of burying myself in gambling apps had apparently made me twitchy in ways that were perceptible to my colleagues,” he wrote.

Throughout the feature, he weaved in stories of gambling addicts, professional bettors and the rapid rise of the practice in America–from $4.9 billion in legal gambling in 2017 to at least $160 billion last year.

By the time Coppins bet on the losing New England Patriots in this year’s Super Bowl, he’d lost $9,891 of the original 10 grand.

At that point, he sought to prevent himself from legal wagering in his home state of Virginia by filling out a “self-exclusion” form, a way of preventing online sportsbooks from taking his bets for a specific period.

CLICK HERE TO DOWNLOAD THE FOX NEWS APP

“When I’d started this project, I had presented it to my bishop as journalism; at some point, it had veered into obsession,” he wrote. 



Source link

Fans’ anger on Kavya Maran… Demand for boycott raised on social media after crores of rupees were spent on anti-India Abrar Ahmed

0

homegameCricket

Fans got angry on Kavya Maran… crores spent on anti-India Abrar

Last Updated:

Fans angrily on Kavya Maran: Sunrisers Group owner Kavya Maran has come under the target of fans during ‘The Hundred’ auction. After buying Pakistan’s spinner Abrar Ahmed for Rs 2.34 crore, huge protest has started on social media. Fans are citing those old videos and posts of Abrar in which he made fun of India. This is the first case of a Pakistani player being bought by a team with IPL links, which has created a big controversy.

Fans got angry on Kavya Maran... crores spent on anti-India Abrar Zoom
Pakistani spinner joins Kavya Maran’s team.

New Delhi. Kavya Maran, owner of Sunrisers Group, has come into a big controversy in the auction of ‘The Hundred’ league held in London. Kavya Maran has bought Pakistan’s mystery spinner Abrar Ahmed for a huge amount of Rs 2.34 crore for her team ‘Sunrisers Leads’. With this, Abrar has become the first Pakistani player to be bought by an IPL linked franchise. But this decision has angered the Indian fans.

The biggest reason for the anger of fans on social media is the old anti-India posts of Abrar Ahmed. Users are reminding Kavya Maran that Abrar had made fun of India many times in the past. Before the T20 World Cup, he had shared a video with Fakhar Zaman and Saim Ayub, in which they were shown drinking ‘tea’. Many saw this as evoking memories of the 2019 India-Pakistan conflict and an insult to India.

Israel launches air attack on Beirut during live Al Jazeera broadcast | Israel attacks Lebanon

0

NewsFeed

An Israeli air attack struck a building during a live Al Jazeera broadcast, moments after the military announced a new “wave of strikes” targeting so-called Hezbollah infrastructure throughout Beirut.



Source link

Police to use Thames to separate protesters at Al Quds protest | UK News

0

Police will use the River Thames to separate protesters and counter-protesters at the Al Quds Day rally in central London on Sunday.

A planned march to the Home Office was banned earlier this week after Home Secretary Shabana Mahmood approved a request from the Metropolitan Police to block it to “prevent serious public disorder”.

The Met added that the organisers, the Islamic Human Rights Commission (IHRC), were “supportive of the Iranian regime”. It is the first time a protest march has been banned by the Met in 14 years.

But the IHRC have said a “static” protest will go ahead, claiming the ban on the rally was a “politically charged decision”. It said the static protest is a peaceful, pro-Palestinian event.

Pic: PA
Image: Pic: PA

In a briefing on Thursday, Assistant Commissioner Ade Adelekan said the use of the Thames as a buffer between opposing groups is a “new bespoke tactic” to tackle the “unique set of circumstances” the Al Quds rally brings.

The Met are expecting at least 6,000 at the Al Quds protest, and an additional 6,000 counter-protesters – but warned there could be “significantly more” due to the volatile situation in the Middle East.

Protesters at the Al Quds march will be south of the River Thames on Albert Embankment, while counter-protesters will be contained within Millbank. Lambeth and Vauxhall Bridges will be shut to all traffic except emergency service vehicles.

More than 1,000 officers are set to police the event, including some from community policing and other forces. There will also be increased policing around other “vulnerable places” in London including areas with large Jewish communities.

Mr Adelekan said officers on the ground “will be briefed to act decisively”, including in relation to placards, flags and chanting.

The assistant commissioner also confirmed there will be a “zero tolerance approach” to hate crime, and anyone expressing support for proscribed organisations will face arrest.

The ban and policing measures “doesn’t completely remove risk of disorder”, Mr Adelekan said, but will make the protest “immeasurably easier to police”.

Read more:
Iran war latest
How Iran blocks the Strait of Hormuz

In its decision to request the ban on the march, the Met said it took into account the history of the Al Quds rally, community tensions and an “intelligence gap” among other factors.

The tradition of Al Quds Day started after the 1979 Iranian Revolution, and traditionally takes place on the last Friday of Ramadan. Marches are held around the world, and the day is described by the IHRC as an expression of support for Palestine.



Source link

Access Denied

0

Access Denied You don’t have permission to access “http://hindi.gadgets360.com/mobiles/motorola-edge-70-fusion-launched-with-5200mah-battery-know-price-features-news-11207669” on this server.

Reference #18.50200117.1773339451.f0b267

https://errors.edgesuite.net/18.50200117.1773339451.f0b267

Travis Kelce reveals he decided to return to NFL ‘midway through’ 2025 season

0

NEWYou can now listen to Fox News articles!

Any concerns about 11-time Pro Bowler Travis Kelce’s career continuing with the Kansas City Chiefs in 2026 were apparently unwarranted.

Shortly after news surfaced that Kelce would return to the only NFL team he’s ever played for, the 36-year-old tight end said he made the decision “about midway through” last season.

“About midway through the season,” Kelce said on the latest episode of “New Heights,” the podcast he co-hosts with his brother, former Philadelphia Eagles center Jason Kelce. 

While questions surfaced as Kelce took some extended time to reveal his decision, he made it clear he did not want to make an emotional decision.

CLICK HERE FOR MORE SPORTS COVERAGE ON FOXNEWS.COM

Travis Kelce

Kansas City Chiefs tight end Travis Kelce walks the sideline before the game against the Buffalo Bills at Highmark Stadium.  (Mark Konezny/Imagn Images)

“I was taking Jason Kelce’s advice. I was taking the advice to take a step back. You gotta let the emotions clear and you gotta have a clear head. I’ve made decisions based off of emotions, and they haven’t always played out the right way. So I think taking a step back, letting the emotions settle down… it still felt like I was hungry enough to get back at it. Obviously, there’s still a little bit of that grit and that emotion. I f—–g hated the way that s–t ended last year and I wanna make it right.”

TRAVIS KELCE CREDITS TAYLOR SWIFT FOR HELPING MOTIVATE HIS RETURN TO THE CHIEFS

Kelce said his decision to return was also driven by another shot at NFL glory. “And I want to get another chance at another f—–g Super Bowl,” he said.

Travis Kelce looks on during a game

Travis Kelce (87) of the Kansas City looks on during an NFL Football game against the San Francisco 49ers at Levi’s Stadium on Oct. 20, 2024 in Santa Clara, California. (Michael Owens/Getty Images)

A 6-11 finish in the 2025 season meant the Chiefs were on the outside looking in at the playoffs for the first time since 2014.

As the Chiefs’ offseason got off to an earlier-than-normal start, Patrick Mahomes’ season-ending ACL injury and the uncertainty swirling around Kelce’s future are being closely watched in Kansas City.

Travis Kelce points

Kansas City Chiefs tight end Travis Kelce (87) celebrates after a catch and run against the Chicago Bears during the first half of the game at GEHA Field at Arrowhead Stadium on Aug. 22, 2025. (Denny Medley/Imagn Images)

Kelce finished last season with 851 receiving yards and five touchdown receptions. 

CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP

The Chiefs selected Kelce in the third round of the 2013 NFL Draft. Kansas City made a splash in free agency this week, signing Super Bowl MVP Kenneth Walker III to bolster its running back room.

Follow Fox News Digital’s sports coverage on X and subscribe to the Fox News Sports Huddle newsletter.



Source link

Biomedical repair pros say OEMs are slowing their work • The Register

0

When patient care is delayed in a hospital because something is broken, biomedical technicians would like you to understand that it’s not usually their fault.

Right-to-repair advocates from the Public Interest Research Group published the results of a survey of biomedical equipment technicians (BMETs) on Thursday that found widespread frustration at the tendency for equipment manufacturers to withhold repairability information and equipment, leading to delays in fixes. 

Most of the BMETs surveyed (83 percent) said delays in receiving parts, service keys, manuals, and other necessary repair materials “somewhat frequently” or “most of the time” increased equipment downtime. The number is similarly high (70 percent) for those who said diagnostic tool restrictions “commonly” delayed prompt patient care. 

According to the study, the most common repair restrictions that BMETs encounter are OEMs’ refusal to provide passwords or service keys needed to read diagnostic information, and limiting access to and overcharging for training courses they require BMETs to pass before getting access to certain info and gear. 

So, why not just go with an OEM contract for equipment maintenance? Most hospitals have OEM contracts, but not for everything, PIRG right-to-repair campaign senior director Nathan Proctor explained. 

“Every hospital has a mix of all three — they have OEM contracts, they have in-house people, and they have certain things they work with independent service organizations [ISOs] on,” Proctor told The Register in an email. “The whole mix of health technology management is complex and involves a range of routine maintenance, serious device failures, and in-depth repairs, IT support, and everything in between.”

Relying on OEMs for timely repairs isn’t a great idea. 

“OEM staffing shortages have become a huge issue,” Proctor told us. “OEMs have not been hitting the timeline stipulated in their contracts.” 

Medical equipment used in hospitals has been exempted from several recently passed right-to-repair laws, PIRG noted in the report. PIRG is hoping to change that.

The agricultural equipment industry is finally being forced to come around through a combination of government lawsuits and state-level bills specific to them, with PIRG and other groups pushing those efforts. In this case, there’s an even more pressing reason to make changes to healthcare equipment repairability, Proctor told us. 

“Oftentimes there is tension between things that cut costs and things that improve quality in health care,” Proctor opined. “Right to Repair is one of the rare things that both cuts costs and improves the quality of care. It’s past time we enacted these reforms.” ®



Source link