FCC walks back router update ban before it bricked America’s network security

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Quietly extends waivers to 2029 after realizing it was about to leave millions of devices unpatched

America’s telco regulator has seen some sense over its ban on foreign-made routers, deciding that existing devices should continue receiving software and firmware updates after all.

The Federal Communications Commission (FCC) has extended waivers covering certain foreign-made routers (and drones) already operating in the US, pushing the update deadline to at least January 1, 2029. Without the extension, updates would have been blocked as early as 2027.

The biggest practical security risk with routers is not only who made them, but whether they remain patched… The original restriction risked creating exactly that problem: millions of deployed routers frozen in time, unable to receive security fixes

Back in March, the FCC updated its Covered List to include all foreign-made consumer routers, prohibiting the approval of any new models. This effectively banned any new kit made in other countries from being sold, but did not prevent the import, sale, or use of existing models that had previously been authorized.

The policy stems from fears that foreign-made router pose a security threat. Because they handle network traffic, they could introduce vulnerabilities exploitable against critical infrastructure, and in the words of the FCC represent “a severe cybersecurity risk that could harm Americans.”

Miscreants have exploited security flaws in routers to disrupt networks or steal intellectual property, and routers are implicated in the Volt, Flax, and Salt Typhoon cyberattacks.

The policy was widely regarded as flawed, not just because the vast majority of consumer router kit is made outside the US or built from components sourced abroad, but because vulnerabilities and security flaws are not limited to any particular geography, and appear in products from all brands and countries of origin, as noted by the Global Electronics Association (GEA).

Blocking firmware updates, which typically deliver security patches for newly discovered flaws, also seemed a peculiar own goal for a regulator whose stated motivation is reducing network vulnerability. 

The FCC has belatedly recognized this, stating that its policies would have “had the effect of prohibiting permissive changes to the UAS, UAS critical components, and routers added to the Covered List in December and March.

“This prohibition would be in effect even for Class I and Class II permissive changes – such as software and firmware security updates that mitigate harm to US consumers – because previously authorized UAS, UAS critical components, and routers are now covered equipment.”

The waivers now run until at least until January 1, 2029, falling into the final month of the Trump administration, when there is a chance this may be overlooked in the preparations for Trump’s successor.

The FCC extension was met with some approval. Doc McConnell, head of policy and compliance at security biz Finite State said in a supplied remark: 

“I strongly support the FCC’s decision to allow firmware and software updates for already-authorized routers, including covered devices already deployed in the United States.”

“The biggest practical security risk with routers is not only who made them, but whether they remain patched. When they stop receiving updates, known vulnerabilities remain exposed, attackers gain durable footholds, and consumers are left with equipment they cannot realistically secure on their own.

“The original restriction risked creating exactly that problem: millions of deployed routers frozen in time, unable to receive security fixes. I appreciate the FCC recognizing that preventing updates could unintentionally make Americans less safe,” he added.

However, as previously reported by The Register, the FCC’s Conditional Approval framework explicitly requires vendors seeking approval for new routers to submit plans to establish or expand manufacturing in America, with quarterly progress updates.

As stated by the GEA, “The policy’s logic assumes that manufacturers can and will move production to the United States.” That might be an assumption too far.  ®



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Bosnia and Herzegovina left vulnerable by policy clash with US, representative says | Bosnia and Herzegovina

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The UN high representative for Bosnia and Herzegovina has warned about the possible destruction of the multi-ethnic state after he was forced to resign in a policy clash with the US, seemingly complicated by the commercial interests of a firm linked to Donald Trump Jr that is seeking to make investments in the region.

The German Christian Democrat politician Christian Schmidt is expected to explain his resignation in a scheduled meeting with the UN security council in New York on Tuesday, where he will also warn about the fragility of Bosnia and Herzegovina. He has made clear he believes his post should be maintained, saying he will stay on until his successor is appointed.

The German chancellor, Friedrich Merz, already locked in a clash with Trump over the Iran war and the reduction of US troops stationed in Germany, has been unable to protect Schmidt from US pressure.

The role of the UN high representative was established as part of the 1995 Dayton peace agreement that ended a three year ethnic war in which more than 100,000 people were killed. It was given wide powers for the interpretation of the agreement, including amending laws, but is subject to the decisions of a 55-strong multinational governing board.

Schmidt has served as high representative for five years, but his appointment has always been opposed by Russia and the largely autonomous Republika Srpska, the Serb-run part of Bosnia and Herzegovina.

He has has clashed with the former Republika Srpska president Milorad Dodik, a close ally of Vladimir Putin and an attendee at the 9 May Moscow Victory Day parade, who he disqualified from office for six months for failing to comply with his decisions. Dodik was until last year subject to US sanctions but, in a reversal not coordinated with the European Union, they were lifted, in a move that signalled a shifting US approach to the western Balkans. There is no sign that Dodik has dropped his secessionist views.

Schmidt had acted against Dodik after the Republika Srpska national assembly voted to disregard the decisions of the Bosnian constitutional court. Since the end of the three-year war in 1995, Bosnia and Herzegovina has consisted of two entities: the Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina, mainly inhabited by Bosniaks and Croats, and the Republika Srpska, primarily inhabited by Serbs.

Schmidt told the security council: “The persistent denial of the multi-ethnic character of the entities, particularly within Republika Srpska, has evolved into systematic exclusion.” He said it was “deeply concerning that narratives portraying Bosnia [and] Herzegovina as a stage for a so-called clash of civilisations have re-emerged”, and he singled out Dodic for using explicitly secessionist terms

Dodik welcomed Schmidt’s resignation on Sunday. “He leaves Bosnia and Herzegovina the same way he arrived: with no legitimacy, no UN security council decision and no backing from international law,” he wrote.

The former leaders of Republika Srpska have been accused of slowly starving state institutions of cash in a bid to break up the state. Diplomats fear the US will either call for the post of high representative to be abolished, or for its preferred choice to be appointed.

The EU will resist the post’s abolition. The UK has not commented on Schmidt’s resignation, but is trying to gauge the chief drivers of US policy towards the region.

His resignation comes against the backdrop of a US based firm, AAFS Infrastructure and Energy, winning a $1.5bn (£1.1bn) contract to build a pipeline from the Croatian coast into Bosnia through which US liquified natural gas would flow. Incorporated in November last year, it is fronted by Donald Trump’s personal lawyer, Jesse Binnall, and Joe Flynn, the brother of Trump’s former national security adviser in Trump’s first term, Michael Flynn, who resigned over unauthorised discussions with Russian officials over lifting US sanctions.

The contract was awarded without a tender following approval from the Bosnian parliament and has been criticised by the EU as possibly jeapordising Bosnia’s plan to join the bloc.

Both the EU and Biden administration had urged Bosnia to end its dependence on Russian energy supplied via Serbia through an extension of a pipeline from Turkey, the Turkstream pipeline. But the manner in which the AAFS contract was awarded, and the support for the pipeline from Dodik, has raises questions about the involvement of Trump’s allies.

According to his entry in the US lobby register, Michael Flynn’s duties include connecting Dodik with “decision-makers and influential figures in Washington”. The Gold Institute for International Strategy, run by Flynn, has also announced plans to host a European Economic and Security Summit at the end of May in Banja Luka, the main city of Republika Srpska.

In April Donald Trump Jr, who runs the family business empire, visited Banja Luka, appearing to be looking for investment opportunities in a region rich in critical minerals.

Binnall has said the pipeline is a “priority” for the Trump administration. Asked about the EU’s intervention, he said: “AAFS will never lose sight of what truly matters in this project: delivering energy security and fostering economic development for the people of Bosnia and Herzegovina. We are committed to working closely with all relevant authorities to develop the infrastructure needed to make this vision a reality.”



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Automated Tire unveils AI robot to solve tire shop staffing shortage


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Tire shops are not exactly known for cutting-edge technology. You pull in, hand over your keys and hope the wait does not take over your day. Automated Tire, Inc. wants to change that.

The Boston-based robotics company has unveiled SmartBay, an AI-powered robotic tire change platform built for dealerships, tire shops and service centers. The system handles tire changes, wheel balancing and vehicle inspections with minimal human intervention.

The timing could be good for repair shops. Many are struggling to find technicians, while EVs are putting more demand on tire service because they can wear through tires faster. SmartBay is ATI’s answer to a service-bay problem that has been building for years.

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AI HUMANOID ROBOT IS CHANGING THE WAY YOU BUY CARS AT DEALERSHIPS

A car is elevated in a shop next to a robotic system.

Automated Tire, Inc.’s SmartBay uses artificial intelligence and robotics to change tires, balance wheels and inspect vehicles with limited human oversight. (Automated Tire, Inc.)

What is the SmartBay AI robot tire changer?

SmartBay is a robotic service-bay system that uses physical AI, computer vision and machine learning to perform tire work in real time. Instead of relying on fixed routines, the system adapts to each vehicle.

Andy Chalofsky, CEO of Automated Tire, Inc., describes it as “the next generation of the automotive service bay,” a robotic-first system built to automate routine, physically demanding work that has traditionally required skilled service-bay personnel.

“Rather than relying on a technician to manually remove the wheel, dismount the tire, balance it on traditional equipment, and reinstall everything, SmartBay performs the tire change and wheel balance itself with only light-touch oversight from an operator,” Chalofsky said.

SmartBay is designed to take on the tough tire work technicians usually do by hand. A worker still keeps an eye on the process, but the robot handles most of the lifting, tire changing and balancing.

How SmartBay changes tires without removing the wheels

Here is the part that may surprise you the most. SmartBay leaves the wheel on the car.

“SmartBay is the first patented system in the world that changes tires without removing the wheel from the vehicle. The car is lifted just as it would be on a conventional lift, but instead of taking off the lug nuts, disturbing the tire pressure monitoring system, and pulling the wheel, SmartBay dismounts the tire directly from the rim while the rim stays on the car,” Chalofsky said.

After the new tire is mounted, SmartBay performs ATI’s trademarked Real Force Balance. Chalofsky says the technology balances “the entire wheel-end assembly, including all of the rotating components in the wheel well,” instead of only balancing the tire by itself. He says the result is “the most complete and accurate balance available on the market today.”

Why tire shops need robotic tire-changing technology

Tire appointments can go sideways fast, especially when a shop is short-staffed or one job takes longer than expected.

“Anyone who has spent time in a tire shop knows how quickly a busy day can fall apart: a technician calls in sick, the first car of the morning takes longer than expected, and the appointments stacked behind it back up the entire schedule,” Chalofsky said.

That is the bottleneck SmartBay is designed to ease. ATI says one technician can manage up to three SmartBay-equipped service bays at once. ATI also designed SmartBay to fit inside a standard 12-foot service bay, so shops do not need oversized lanes or major infrastructure changes.

The company says its initial machines are targeting a 45-minute door-to-door tire change for four tires, mounted and balanced. As the technology learns more, that time could be reduced to 30 minutes.

How the AI robot handles different vehicles

SmartBay has to deal with whatever rolls into the service bay that day. “Every vehicle that comes into a service bay is different,” Chalofsky said. “Even within a single model line, those combinations multiply quickly.”

Road grime adds another layer of difficulty. Vehicles may arrive covered in mud, snow, road salt, brake dust or rain, and the system still has to identify what it is working on safely.

Chalofsky says SmartBay handles all of this with “a self-learning AI layer that adapts in real time to hundreds of data points per vehicle.”

That approach takes the kind of judgment technicians build over years and turns it into a repeatable system that can keep learning over time.

How SmartBay could speed up tire service

Speed is a big part of what ATI says SmartBay can bring to an auto service business. Chalofsky says the system creates consistency because it can repeat the same process with less variation from one vehicle to the next.

“A single technician can run two or three SmartBays in parallel, processing roughly 24 tires an hour compared to about four tires in 75 minutes today”, Chalofsky said.

That could help keep the day from getting backed up when appointments start stacking. For customers, it could mean less time waiting around for updates. Chalofsky says the result can be “more billable volume” and “more predictable scheduling” for high-volume service centers. 

BMW PUTS HUMANOID ROBOTS TO WORK BUILDING EVS

A car tire is shown next to a robotic system.

SmartBay uses computer vision and machine learning to adapt to different vehicles, road grime and wheel configurations in real time. (Automated Tire, Inc.)

Why EV tire wear makes SmartBay more important

EVs are changing what tire shops have to handle. “EVs are reshaping the tire economy. Because of their weight and instant torque, EV tires wear faster and need to be replaced more often,” Chalofsky said. He added that tires are now “the single largest lifetime maintenance expense on most EVs,” taking the place of routine costs like oil and filters.

That is a big shift for drivers. EV owners may end up visiting tire shops more often. If shops already struggle with staffing, that extra demand could make the waiting-room problem worse.

ATI believes SmartBay can help shops handle more tire work without needing the same increase in labor. Chalofsky says the system can work across different vehicle classes because “a Tesla, an F-150, and a Chevy Silverado all run through the same system.”

Will robotic tire changers replace technicians?

This is the question everyone asks when robotics enters a hands-on job. Chalofsky answers it head-on. “Both, but mostly the latter,” he said when asked whether SmartBay replaces technicians or changes the work they do.

He says SmartBay can take over repetitive tire tasks where robotics can work more efficiently. But he also argues that it can make existing workers more valuable.

“In many cases, it allows a shop to take a lower-skilled operator and get three to four times the throughput out of them, which means shops can actually pay those operators more because the work is more valuable,” Chalofsky said.

The bigger picture here is that skilled mechanics could spend less time lifting tires and more time on diagnostic or mechanical work that needs their expertise.

“Every wave of automation we’ve seen in adjacent industries has played out the same way: technology augments the workforce far more than it replaces it, and that’s the dynamic we expect here,” Chalofsky said. 

How SmartBay could make tire service safer

Tire work is physical. Heavy wheel assemblies can strain backs, shoulders and knees, especially over a long shift. Chalofsky says SmartBay can help reduce those risks.

“Because SmartBay leaves the rim on the vehicle, technicians are no longer lifting heavy, expensive wheel assemblies on and off mounting machines. This eliminates one of the most common sources of strain injuries and workers’ compensation claims in tire work,” he said.

He added that the equipment includes sensors designed to help it operate safely around people in a busy service bay. SmartBay also connects deployed systems through a network, allowing one unit to learn from another. 

Chalofsky gave the example of a specific F-150 trim package seen for the first time in California. That data could train every machine in Boston and Florida in near real time. The goal is a system that gets smarter as more shops use it.

What drivers may notice with AI tire service

Most drivers probably will not care how much AI is working behind the scenes. They will care about the part they feel right away: how long the visit takes and how well the car drives afterward.

Chalofsky says consistency will stand out most. “The biggest thing customers would notice is consistency: a faster, more predictable visit, with their car in and out in a defined window rather than depending on which technician happens to be working that day,” he said.

He also says Real Force Balance could help deliver a better ride because it balances the full wheel assembly, rather than only the tire. SmartBay’s automated visual inspection can also check parts inside the wheel well and flag issues a busy technician might overlook.

For drivers, that could mean a smoother tire visit from start to finish. For shops, it gives them another way to show customers exactly what was checked and why it matters. 

HUMANOID ROBOT SWAPS ITS OWN BATTERY TO WORK 24/7

A robotic system changes a tire.

SmartBay is designed to change tires without removing wheels from vehicles, a process ATI says can reduce strain on technicians and speed up service. (Automated Tire, Inc.)

Why ATI started with automated tire changes

Tires may not sound like the most exciting place to start, but they are one of the most common reasons people visit service centers. They also make a strong case for automation because the work is frequent, physically demanding and hard to staff.

“Tire changes and wheel balancing check nearly every box for a first product. It’s one of the most frequent reasons a vehicle comes into a service bay, it’s a high-dollar transaction, the work is physically arduous and exactly the kind of task a robotic-first platform is well suited to handle, and the labor shortage is most acute precisely in this part of the workforce,” Chalofsky said.

He points to EV growth, retiring technicians and broad demand across dealerships, aftermarket shops and fleets. ATI also has a personal connection to the problem. Chalofsky is a fourth-generation tire industry entrepreneur and previously founded several tire businesses, including SimpleTire. 

That background gives ATI firsthand knowledge of how tire shops actually operate. Rather than chasing a flashy robotics use case, the company is applying tire-industry experience to a long-running bottleneck.

What this means to you

If you own a gas car, hybrid or EV, this kind of technology could make a tire appointment feel like less of a waiting game. A robotic tire system could help shops move cars through faster when appointments start piling up. It could also make balancing more consistent, which may help your car ride more smoothly after service.

EV owners may feel the impact sooner. Heavier electric vehicles can wear through tires faster, and replacement costs can add up quickly. If shops can handle more tire work without longer waits, EV maintenance could become a little less frustrating.

SmartBay could also change the job for technicians. Instead of spending as much time on the most physically demanding tire work, they could shift more toward oversight and higher-skill repairs.

For service centers, the payoff is steadier operations. When one technician can oversee multiple bays, a busy day may be less likely to turn into a long backup. 

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Kurt’s key takeaways

SmartBay is one of those things that makes you wonder why tire service has not changed more by now. Cars have become far more advanced, but many tire shops still rely on the same tough manual process drivers have dealt with for years. ATI is betting that physical AI can help the service bay catch up with the vehicles coming into it. The real test will be what happens on a packed Saturday morning when every bay is full, and customers are watching the clock. Robots can look impressive in a demo. The real question is whether they can hold up in busy service bays and make tire appointments less of a headache for drivers.

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Would you trust an AI robot to change and balance your tires if it meant a faster visit and a smoother ride? Let us know by writing to us at Cyberguy.com

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Google and Amnesty International teamed up to make it harder for spyware vendors to hide

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Google launched a feature for Android phones Tuesday for dedicated forensic logs about intrusions from sophisticated attacks like those by spyware vendors, in what design partners at Amnesty International hailed as an important first.

The tech giant has been ramping up the new feature, Intrusion Logging, since last year, and has now begun rolling it out.

“The new intrusion logging feature promises to be a major aid to digital forensics researchers undertaking investigations into sophisticated attacks on Android devices,” Amnesty International said in a Tuesday technical briefing. “This is the first time a major device vendor has released a feature specifically to enhance the ability to forensically detect and respond to advanced digital threats.”

To date, independent investigators have relied on records and often short-lived log files that weren’t meant for forensic use, and Amnesty said surveillance groups have grown increasingly aware of those forensic efforts. Intrusion Logging, a feature of Android Advanced Protection Mode, is designed specifically to keep track of possible intrusions for forensic purposes. It keeps records of security incidents like device unlocking, physical access and spyware installation and removal.

Google’s annual security and privacy update for Android phones mentions the feature and its development with Amnesty International, Reporters Without Borders and others. It also touts new protections against banking scam calls, other features for detecting suspicious activity on Android phones, additional privacy safeguards and more.

The firm has been working on the feature since announcing it last year.

“Intrusion Logging enables persistent and privacy-preserving forensics logging to allow for investigation of devices in the event of a suspected compromise,” wrote Eugene Liderman, director of Android security and privacy.

Intrusion Logging joins an expanding slate of features from tech companies to fight sophisticated attacks like those from commercial spyware, among them Apple’s Lockdown Mode and Memory Integrity Enforcement and WhatsApp’s Strict Account Settings.

Intrusion Logging “promises to help shift the balance to the advantage of defenders, providing civil society investigators with the key evidence needed to detect and expose some of the most advanced attacks facing journalists and activists,” said Donncha Ó Cearbhaill, head of the Amnesty International Security Lab, “With Intrusion Logging Google is the first major vendor to proactively address to challenge of detecting advanced attacks on device. By making more consensual forensic data available for researchers, we can make life more difficult for attackers and help civil society seek accountability when their devices are unlawfully targeted by spyware and mobile data extraction tools.”

The feature has some limitations, though, Amnesty said in its technical briefing. It requires Android 16 and is only available for now on Pixel devices; the device has to be linked to a Google account, and the logs may include sensitive information, like browser navigation history, so secure sharing of the logs is important.

The logs may also be deletable by attackers, Ó Cearbhaill told CyberScoop, but he said he understands there are plans to strengthen protections against that in future versions. And lots of attacks would be detectable in the logs where attackers wouldn’t necessarily have the root access needed to try to delete logs, he said.

To enable Intrusion Logging, users need to be using Android Advanced Protection Mode, and can find the feature at Settings > Security & privacy > Advanced Protection > Intrusion Logging. If users suspect some kind of security incident, they’ll need to export and share the logs with a forensic analyst.

Tim Starks

Written by Tim Starks

Tim Starks is senior reporter at CyberScoop. His previous stops include working at The Washington Post, POLITICO and Congressional Quarterly. An Evansville, Ind. native, he’s covered cybersecurity since 2003. Email Tim here: tim.starks@cyberscoop.com.


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Pentagon gives new $29bn Iran war price tag, downplays munitions concerns | US-Israel war on Iran News

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Appearing before congressional panel, Defense Secretary Hegseth says US is prepared to escalate or wind down war.

The Pentagon has released a new price tag for the US-Israel war with Iran, saying it has cost the United States $29bn.

The department’s comptroller revealed the new total during a Senate committee hearing on Tuesday alongside Pentagon chief Pete Hegseth.

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The estimate is an increase from the $25bn the official, Jules Hurst, reported to members of Congress in late April, the first time the administration of US President Donald Trump had given an official figure. Several experts have questioned the Pentagon’s ledger, saying the real cost to US taxpayers was likely much higher.

Fighting has remained generally paused in the US-Israeli war since April 8, barring a handful of flare-ups. Hurst attributed the discrepancy in the earlier to an “updated repair and replacement of equipment … and also just general operational costs”.

The administration has so far not offered a clear picture of damage sustained at US military installations across the Middle East since the US and Israel began launching attacks on February 28, nor has it revealed the true extent to which the fighting has affected the military’s munitions stockpile.

Asked about concerns over the US’s ability to replenish its weapons supply without weakening its global posture, Hegseth said the Pentagon was “well aware of all those dynamics”.

“The munitions issue has been foolishly and unhelpfully overstated,” Hegseth told the House Appropriations subcommittee. “We know exactly what we have; we have plenty of what we need.”

The Pentagon chief also gave little indication of long-term plans for the war, a day after Trump rejected a new ceasefire proposal from Iran.

Trump told reporters the ongoing pause in fighting was “on life support” and was “unbelievably weak”.

Hegseth said there were plans to both resume fighting and to de-escalate.

“We have a plan to escalate if necessary,” he said. “We have a plan to retrograde if necessary. We have a plan to shift assets.”

It has remained unclear whether the Trump administration will indeed have the political will to resume fighting amid the protracted standoff over the Strait of Hormuz.

The war – and its economic toll – has proven unpopular in the US and threatens to harm Republicans in the midterm elections in November.

On Tuesday, the US Labor Department reported that its consumer price index had risen 3.8 percent from April 2025, the highest annual increase since 2023. On a monthly basis, April prices rose 0.6 percent from March as prices for gasoline or petrol rose 5.4 percent.

The apparent dilemma for Washington was set to loom large during Trump’s visit to China this week, although US officials have said they hope to make progress on other issues, aside from disagreements over the war in Iran.

Speaking during the hearing, which concerned the Pentagon’s historic $1.5 trillion funding request, Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Dan Caine said responding to China’s growing influence would remain the top priority during the trip.

He said the Pentagon wants “a range and mix of capabilities that create outsized dilemmas for [Chinese President] Xi Jinping and others that are out there, to ensure that we maintain and sustain deterrence”.



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Police shoot man dead after he pulls out weapon in stand off



A man has been shot dead by police in Bedford this morning.

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Diamondbacks vs. Rangers betting preview favors Texas at home with both starters struggling on the mound


I’ve had a tough run in the second round of the NBA playoffs. The first round went really well, but this round has been a struggle. Lost in all of that has been a string of solid baseball looks that have kept the bankroll from plummeting. I’m going back to the diamond tonight as the Diamondbacks take on the Rangers in a night game.

The Arizona Diamondbacks are a team I’ve covered a few times recently, and I mentioned that the expectation of this season is probably what they are showing us at the moment. The team is 20-20 for the year, slightly better at home than on the road. I’d be really surprised if they ended up better than what we are seeing if they make no moves. Offensively, the team is doing well, but they still need some pitching to improve their club. Perhaps if Corbin Burnes comes back around the All-Star break, they could make a push for a Wild Card spot at the end of the year.

Evan Carter of the Texas Rangers celebrating after hitting a double at Chase Field

Evan Carter of the Texas Rangers celebrates after hitting a double in the seventh inning against the Arizona Diamondbacks during Game Five of the World Series at Chase Field in Phoenix, Ariz., on Nov. 1, 2023. (Christian Petersen/Getty Images)

Burnes’ return would be helpful, but Zac Gallen’s improvement would probably be the biggest boost to the club. Gallen is 1-3 with a 4.70 ERA and a 1.49 WHIP. He has been worse on the road than at home as well. He has made four starts, spanning 17.2 innings, and allowed 14 earned runs. While that line looks bad, two of his starts were okay on the road. In two starts against the Mets and Phillies, he allowed four earned runs over 10 innings compared to 10 earned runs in 7.2 innings against the Cubs and Dodgers. Rangers hitters have been successful against Gallen in the past, hitting .267 with about a third of their hits going for extra bases.

The Texas Rangers are another team that has playoff expectations, but isn’t off to a great start to the year. They enter tonight’s game with a 19-22 record and a 9-10 mark at home. The Rangers are actually about the same in terms of hitting statistics. Their pitching staff has carried them a bit at the moment, with them collectively throwing to a 3.59 ERA and a 1.22 WHIP. If they make a move or two for some bats, they might have a chance to make a push for a postseason berth.

Arizona Diamondbacks pitcher Zac Gallen throwing a pitch during a baseball game.

Arizona Diamondbacks starting pitcher Zac Gallen throws against the Texas Rangers during the first inning of Game 1 of the World Series in Arlington, Texas, on Oct. 27, 2023. (Brynn Anderson/AP)

They did make a move in the offseason, but it was to bolster their already deep starting rotation. That move came in the form of acquiring MacKenzie Gore, who is making a start tonight. Gore was one of the more sought-after arms at the trade deadline last year. So far, Gore hasn’t really paid off, throwing to a 2-3 record with a 5.18 ERA and a 1.40 WHIP. He has been better at home this season, but hasn’t made a ton of starts. He hasn’t allowed more than three earned runs in any of his three home outings. Diamondbacks hitters have been solid against him in limited at-bats (12-for-38).

There are a few angles I like for this game. I love sharing ideas for player props in case you play daily fantasy or anything. Lourdes Gurriel Jr. is 5-for-9 against Gore in his career. Evan Carter is also 5-for-9 with four doubles against Gallen. I’ll play him at +389 tonight for 2+ hits. 2+ total bases are +181 and +112 for 2+ hits, runs, and RBIs if you want a different option.

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Texas Rangers pitcher MacKenzie Gore pitching against New York Yankees at Yankee Stadium

Texas Rangers starting pitcher MacKenzie Gore pitches against the New York Yankees during the first inning at Yankee Stadium in the Bronx, N.Y., on May 7, 2026. (Brad Penner/Imagn Images)

As far as a side, I think Gallen’s road struggles make the Rangers the right side in this game. Texas at -131 is the right way to go in this one. I also think the offenses are going to feast on the starters tonight. I’ll back the over 8 for this game.

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Android 17 to expand banking scam call and privacy protections

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Android 17 to expand banking scam call and privacy protections

Android 17, expected to roll out next month, will introduce several security and privacy features focused on device theft, threat detection, and banking scam calls.

Google will be expanding protections against scammers spoofing caller IDs to impersonate financial institutions and trick users into transferring money or revealing account-related information.

Android will work with banking apps to detect spoofed calls and automatically terminate the connection when a scam is identified.

Terminating a scam call
Terminating a scam call
Source: Google

The call’s authenticity verification occurs via app-level queries and by comparing the calling number to an internal set provided by the banks, and is not used for customer communication.

The initial rollout will cover the massively popular digital banking and payments app Revolut, the large Brazilian retail and commercial bank Itaú Unibanco, and the Latin American digital bank Nubank.

Although the feature will be introduced in Android 17, Google promises to make it available on Android 11 and later.

Android’s Live Threat Detection – an anti-stalkerware capability that leverages Play Protect to analyze app behavior and assess potential risk – is being expanded to detect additional abuse techniques, including SMS forwarding misuse, concealed accessibility overlays, apps that hide or alter their icons, and malicious background launches.

Live Threat Detection flagging a malicious app
Flagging a malicious app
Source: Google

The Advanced Protection device-level security, available since Android 16, will also be expanded, now restricting accessibility service access to apps explicitly labeled as accessibility tools, disabling device-to-device unlocking, disabling Chrome WebGPU support, and adding scam detection for chat notifications.

To increase protection against device theft, Google’s “Mark as lost” feature in Android 17 will allow locking a phone with biometric authentication, as an extra option to device passcode or a PIN.

As such, thieves will not be able to disable device tracking or access it again if you mark it as lost, even if they have the passcode/PIN to unlock it.


source: Google

Once the device is marked as lost, the Quick Settings menu will become unavailable, and WiFi and Bluetooth connections will be disabled.

Google says that in select markets, including Argentina, Chile, Colombia, Mexico, and the United Kingdom, the device theft protection feature will be available on smartphones running Android 10 or later.

Additional notable improvements related to privacy and security include:

  • Chrome for Android will scan downloaded APKs for known malware before installation.
  • “Mark as lost” will require biometrics to unlock devices, hide Quick Settings, and block new Wi-Fi and Bluetooth connections. Remote Lock and Theft Detection Lock will also become enabled by default on Android 17 devices and some Android 10+ devices in select markets.
  • Android 17 will reduce PIN/password-guessing attempts and increase the delay between failed unlock attempts.
  • Android 12+ devices will allow viewing the lock-screen IMEI for ownership verification and recovery.
  • Android 17 adds temporary precise-location sharing, improved location access indicators/history, and a new contact picker for temporary access to specific contacts only.
  • Android 17 introduces AISeal with pKVM for hardware-backed isolation of AI-related data processing.
  • Pixel devices will initially gain verification for official Android builds, backed by a public ledger for authentic Google apps and GMS APIs.
  • Android will hide SMS one-time passwords from most apps for three hours to block OTP theft.
  • Carriers will be able to ship devices with 2G disabled by default in regions where legacy networks are retired.
  • Android is adding post-quantum cryptography protections for future-proof security.

Some of these features, like OS verification, are launching on Pixel devices first or are limited to newer models, while others might be open to OEM adoption, so rollout timelines may vary widely across the Android ecosystem.

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Kuwait says it foils infiltration operation by Iran’s IRGC | US-Israel war on Iran News

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Kuwait arrests four men it accuses of being in Revolutionary Guard and conducting failed infiltration of Bubiyan Island.

Kuwait has arrested four men it accuses of being members of Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) after they allegedly tried to infiltrate Bubiyan Island by sea and injured a Kuwaiti soldier.

The Ministry of Interior said in a statement published on X on Tuesday that the operation took place on May 1 and the naval officers arrested “aboard a fishing boat specially chartered to carry out hostile actions against Kuwait” admitted they had been tasked by the IRGC with “infiltrating”.

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The ministry identified the group members as Colonels Amir Hussein Abd Mohammed Zara’i and Abdulsamad Yadallah Qanwati, Captain Ahmed Jamshid Gholam Reza Zulfiqari and First Lieutenant Mohammed Hussein Sehrab Faroughi Rad.

During a confrontation with Kuwaiti forces on the island, gunfire wounded one Kuwaiti service member, the ministry said. Two other members of the group – navy Captain Mansour Qambari and the boat’s captain, Abdulali Kazem Siamari – escaped during the clash.

There was no immediate reaction from Iran on the accusations.

Bubiyan is Kuwait’s largest island, located at the northern tip of the Gulf near the Iraqi border. It holds significant strategic value due to its proximity to key shipping lanes and its location near Kuwait’s northern oilfields and military installations.

‘Flagrant violation’

Kuwait’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs condemned the alleged incursion as a “flagrant violation” of Kuwaiti sovereignty and a grave breach of international law. It demanded that Iran immediately and unconditionally cease “unlawful hostile acts”.

The deputy foreign minister summoned Iran’s ambassador to Kuwait to hand over a formal protest note, reserving Kuwait’s right to self-defence under Article 51 of the United Nations Charter. The ministry said it holds Tehran fully responsible for the violation.

Kuwait’s foreign minister received a phone call from his Bahraini counterpart, who condemned the infiltration and affirmed “Kuwait’s full right to take all necessary measures to safeguard its sovereignty and protect its people”.

Earlier this week, Kuwait also reported intercepting “a number of hostile drones” in its airspace but did not specify where the drones were launched from.

The incursion followed strikes in April that hit Kuwait’s Mina al-Ahmadi oil refinery, one of the Middle East’s largest, and a power and desalination plant. Kuwait said Iran was responsible.

On March 30, an Indian national was killed in an attack on a Kuwaiti power and desalination plant that Kuwait also attributed to Iran. Tehran has denied responsibility for those strikes and instead blamed Israel.

Kuwait, located just 80km (50 miles) from Iran’s coastline, is highly dependent on desalinated water.



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