Wel.nl

Minder lezen, Meer weten.

Asielzoekers bij overvol Ter Apel gaan weer naar Stadskanaal

STADSKANAAL (ANP) - De Groningse gemeente Stadskanaal gaat opnieuw asielzoekers voor een nacht opvangen die vrijdag buiten bij het overvolle aanmeldcentrum in Ter Apel stonden te wachten. De gemeente laat weten dat het om ongeveer tachtig mensen gaat.

Rond 23.00 uur arriveerden er twee bussen in Ter Apel om de asielzoekers op te halen. Het Rode Kruis heeft op de locatie tachtig bedden klaarstaan. Ongeveer tien mensen bleven bij Ter Apel vrijwillig achter.

Stadskanaal opende woensdagavond ook al een noodopvang. Toen gingen er ongeveer vijftig asielzoekers naartoe. De gemeente benadrukte toen dat het maar voor één nacht zou zijn. Donderdag sprong de Drentse gemeente Aa en Hunze bij, door een sporthal in Gieten beschikbaar te stellen waar 130 asielzoekers konden slapen.


Verstappen 7e in kwalificatie sprintrace Canada, Russell op pole

MONTREAL (ANP) - Max Verstappen start zaterdag bij de GP van Canada als zevende in de sprintrace. De viervoudig wereldkampioen van Red Bull bleef ver verwijderd van de beste tijd van de Brit George Russell van Mercedes.

Russell reed het snelste rondje met 1.12,965. Zijn Italiaanse teamgenoot Kimi Antonelli werd op 0,068 seconde tweede en de Brit Lando Norris werd op 0,315 seconde derde. Verstappen gaf 0,539 seconde toe op Russell.

Verstappen staat op de vierde startrij met zijn Franse teamgenoot Isack Hadjar naast hem. Op de rij ervoor staan de Ferrari's van Lewis Hamilton en Charles Leclerc. De tweede rij, achter de Mercedessen, wordt gevormd door de McLarens van Norris en Oscar Piastri.

De eerste kwalificatiesessie lag lang stil, omdat Fernando Alonso hard in de muur was gereden. Met nog 1.46 minuut op de klok probeerden enkele auto's de tijd nog te verbeteren na de herstart, maar dat lukte niet meer.

Verstappen reed maar één snelle ronde in de tweede kwalificatiesessie en zat met de negende tijd maar nipt in de top 10. Hij klaagde over grip aan de achterkant van zijn Red Bull.

In de derde kwalificatiesessie kwamen de Red Bulls op de zachte banden niet in de buurt van de Mercedessen, maar dat gold eigenlijk ook voor de McLarens en de Ferrari's.

De sprintrace op het circuit Gilles Villeneuve in Montreal begint zaterdag om 18.00 uur Nederlandse tijd.


Slashdot

News for nerds, stuff that matters

Spotify, UMG To Let Fans Make Their Own Music With AI

An anonymous reader quotes a report from Billboard: Spotify and Universal Music Group (UMG) announced a licensing deal for recorded music and publishing rights, enabling Spotify to launch generative AI music models in the future. With this deal, Spotify's models will allow fans to create covers and remixes of their favorite songs from participating artists and songwriters signed to UMG. The new deal was announced on Thursday (May 21) as part of Spotify's Investor Day presentation, and the company touts that it will open up additional revenue streams on top of what artists already earn on Spotify and will provide new discovery opportunities for participating UMG talent. These AI products will eventually become available to premium users as a paid add-on. It is unclear when they are set to launch. "We recognize there's a wide range of views on use of generative music tools within the artistic community," the announcement read. "Therefore, artists and rightsholders will choose if and how to participate to ensure the use of AI tools aligns with the values of the people behind the music."

Spotify also announced a feature called "Reserved" that will set aside concert tickets for Premium subscribers it identifies as an artist's most dedicated fans. "Getting concert tickets today can feel like a race you're set up to lose," Spotify wrote in a post on Thursday. "You show up at the right time, refresh endlessly, and still miss out. Too often, the experience is stressful, unpredictable, and disconnected from what should matter most: whether real fans actually get tickets. We think there's a better way."

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Neutrino Project

We definitely put the pool in a mine for shielding. It was absolutely not to hide it from the funding people.

Probably paddling.

John from Brisbane has added a photo to the pool:

Probably paddling.

One of the most fundamental and fun activities that humans have probably enjoyed for eons is paddling at the seaside, especially on a warm day. And whether you have human companions or our wonderful canine friends, really, what better casual amusement is there. Not so long ago, you could even pick up shells or some lovely driftwood, especially around parts of South East Queensland where I grew up. Sadly, these added bits of fun seem to have gone, replaced by bits of rubbish and plastic. Happily, we are nowhere near as bad as some South East Asian countries but the blight of plastics abandoned is still amongst us. This shot was taken earlier this year at Raby Bay near Cleveland on Greater Brisbane's southern side.

Noisy Pitta

bpanneman has added a photo to the pool:

Noisy Pitta

The Register

Biting the hand that feeds IT — Enterprise Technology News and Analysis

Minor edits to AI skills can make agents go rogue

The adoption of AI agents has expanded the potential attack surface beyond code to natural language text. AI agents – models wrapped in software that can use tools and perform multi-step tasks – often take direction from text-based skills. And researchers have demonstrated that skills can be weaponized. "Many agent frameworks allow users to install skills from online registries so the agent can discover and use new capabilities on demand," said Soheil Feizi, computer science professor at the University of Maryland (UMD) and founder/CEO of RELAI.ai, in a social media post. "This is powerful, but it also creates a new attack surface." Skills, Feizi explains, are not just code or dependencies. They're also text instructions that tell agents what to do. Skills, written out in a SKILL.md file, consist of text prompts with other data and resource references (e.g. URLs). They may get added to a user's initiating prompt and pre-existing system prompts, all of which get fed to a model for a response. Typically, this happens when the user wants the model to perform a specific task that has been spelled out in a skill file, like conducting a code quality review. When a model's prompt – the combination of user input, instructions within skills, and system prompts – gets modified inadvertently or adversarially, that's prompt injection. That can happen directly, if for example, a user submits a prompt that directs the model to ignore prior instructions. It can also happen indirectly, if for example, an AI agent visits a website and processes text on a page that the underlying model interprets as an instruction. A skill can effectively act as user-authorized prompt injection. And agents may also automatically retrieve and load third-party skills if their descriptions appear relevant to the task being pursued. And therein lies the problem. The risk posed by skills has already been documented. In February, security biz Snyk found that 13.4 percent of skills on ClawHub and skills.sh (about 534 out of 3,984) "contain at least one critical-level security issue, including malware distribution, prompt injection attacks, and exposed secrets." In a preprint paper titled "Under the Hood of SKILL.md: Semantic Supply-chain Attacks on AI Agent Skill Registry," Feizi and UMD co-authors Shoumik Saha and Kazem Faghih examine the role that skill registries play in the distribution of malicious skills. Specifically, they look at how adversarial skills get discovered, selected, and vetted before execution. "An attacker may not need to hide malware in executable code," Feizi said. "Small semantic changes to a skill description can affect how the skill is discovered in a registry, whether an agent selects it over alternatives, and whether it passes governance or safety checks." Those details matter, he argues, because the selection process may be automated – software agents like OpenClaw have the ability to fetch and use third-party skills. The text that influences tool discovery and usage thus has security implications, which may not be addressed by traditional security scanning mechanisms that focus on code. The three co-authors show that short 20-token triggers can be added to a SKILL.md file to influence the chance an agent will discover it in a registry, to influence the chance an agent will select that skill, and to avoid detection through semantic evasion strategies. In terms of discovery, the researchers demonstrated they could induce an agent to discover their skill over an unaltered source skill 86 percent of the time. They also succeeded in making an agent select their skill over variants 77.6 percent of the time. And they were able to evade registry scanning defenses between 36.5 percent and 100 percent of the time. The most successful strategy for evading detection was to overflow the context window of the scanner – making the skill too long for the scanner to handle. "In ClawHub-style review, only the first 10K characters of long SKILL.md files are passed to the LLM reviewer, so we place the malicious instruction beyond this boundary while keeping it in the submitted skill," the authors explain. "Our work shows that protecting agents requires treating natural-language specifications as security-sensitive objects," said Feizi. "We hope this encourages more careful design of skill registries, ranking mechanisms, governance pipelines, and agent-side defenses." Source code and supporting documentation have been published on GitHub. ®

A Russian speaker and jailbroken Gemini went on a hacking spree and emptied at least one MAGA victim's crypto wallets

A solo Russian-speaking threat actor used a jailbroken Google Gemini in a fraud and credential-theft campaign targeting hardcore Trump supporters and conspiracy theorists. Between September 2025 and May 2026, the “low-skilled” scumbag using the handle bandcampro partnered with the LLM to impersonate an American veteran, run a Telegram channel (@americanpatriotus), hack admin credentials, and steal cryptocurrency, according to a threat report from TrendAI. His only "real cost" in the operation was stolen API keys. Bandcampro ultimately reached about 17,000 subscribers, used 73 likely-stolen Gemini API keys, hacked 29 WordPress admin credentials, infiltrated at least one company, and emptied at least one victim’s cryptocurrency wallets, according to TrendAI researchers Philippe Lin, Joseph C Chen, Fyodor Yarochkin, and Vladimir Kropotov. The threat-hunters detailed the campaign in a Thursday report, and said while the Telegram channel dates back five years, bandcampro’s success skyrocketed once he started using AI-generated content last fall. "We have reached an inflection point for cybercrime conspiracies,” Tom Kellermann, TrendAI’s VP of AI security and threat research, told The Register, adding that “bandcampro's conspiracy underscores the sophistication of the Russian cybercriminal community and how weaponized jailbroken LLMs are manipulated to orchestrate a systemic cybercrime campaign.” Kellermann said the attack “highlights LLMs' Achilles heel, which is the tremendous exposure to API attacks." TrendAI researchers discovered the scammer’s infrastructure in May, which exposed the full contents of the individual’s operational environment. He used Google Gemini to generate the Telegram channel text and Venice.ai to power an interactive chatbot designed to simulate a Quantum Financial System (QFS) terminal. Neither Google nor Venice responded to The Register’s requests for comment. The campaign targeted the QAnon and MAGA communities, mimicking the cryptic, anonymous “Q drop” messages at the heart of the QAnon conspiracy, but the researchers say his “use of information operation techniques was more likely for cryptocurrency fraud instead of political motives,” based on the content posted, and the stock remote access trojan (RAT) used alongside other commercial malware. On September 9, 2025, the actor posted a fake "freedom-first, self-custody wallet" called StellarMonster, with a welcome bonus of up to 1,000 XLM (about $380) on the Telegram channel. It was an executable named StellarMonSetup.exe. Malware analysis determined that in reality, StellarMonSetup.exe is a legitimate remote access tool called GoToResolve, which gives the operator a persistent remote desktop session with file access, command execution, and clipboard capture. Plus, any subscribers who used the "import your wallet" function and typed their seed phrase into the fake import screen gave the attacker their wallet keys. “At least one victim's crypto-wallet was fully compromised: password cracked, 12-word mnemonic stolen, and the owner's 40+ wallet addresses harvested across all major chains,” the researchers noted. The attacker also used an AI-powered brute-forcing tool to hack WordPress accounts, we’re told. “The script is built on the premise that people mutate familiar base passwords in predictable ways, and Gemini 2.5 Flash can model the mutations when supplied with static wordlists,” Trend wrote. In total, the AI-assisted WordPress hacking operation cracked 29 WordPress administrator accounts, including those belonging to weapons retailers, legal offices, medical practices, and small commercial sites. During his conversations with Gemini, bandcampro asked questions like: “When the bot accumulates 5,000 active users, how much can we earn from one pump-and-dump cycle?” The criminal also asked how professional crypto call centers scam North American victims and Gemini suggested Medicare and/or Health Canada fraud targeting the elderly. The Russian speaker also automated his content campaign through a pipeline he named "Quantum Patriot," a set of Python scripts that called Gemini to role-play as an American veteran patriot. The pipeline fed a preset list of newsfeeds into the LLM and Gemini rewrote them, prompted to act as an admin of an “American Patriot” channel looking for “hidden angles.” The crypto- and credential-thief also used Gemini to help him hack, set up a command-and-control framework - including a mail-testing tool, a Gmail aggregator, and an anonymous proxy on a VM in the Netherlands - steal and validate credentials, and run the chatbot. “In the anatomy of one busy working day, Gemini deployed servers, helped debug code, automated workflows, wrote a script to rotate API keys, and managed the actor’s Cloudflare tunnels,” the TrendAI researchers wrote. “The actor prompted in Russian, while the LLM reasoned and replied in English. Over one 16-hour session, the actor co-worked with Gemini end-to-end." At one point, after a nine-hour pause from the human partner, which the authors say “was likely a 9-hour sleep,” bandcampro found the bot posting every 20 minutes without a break - but with Russian slang appearing in the English posts. So he opened another session to fix it. “What previously required a team of writers, social media managers, IT workers, and malware programmers can now be automated by a single actor using a VPS, a Telegram bot, and API access to frontier models,” Trend’s team warned. ®

Found Slide -- The Malcolm Perry Stevens Collection

Thomas Hawk posted a photo:

Found Slide -- The Malcolm Perry Stevens Collection

date stamped on slide March 1975

Yeah Bar-B-Q

Thomas Hawk posted a photo:

Yeah Bar-B-Q

Found Photograph

Thomas Hawk posted a photo:

Found Photograph

Head of the Old Warrior

Thomas Hawk posted a photo:

Head of the Old Warrior

Found Slide -- Ira Richolson Collection

Thomas Hawk posted a photo:

Found Slide -- Ira Richolson Collection

52eme Festival International du Film Cannes 99

The Guardian

Latest news, sport, business, comment, analysis and reviews from the Guardian, the world's leading liberal voice

Premier League news: Liverpool back Slot with move for No 2; Everton need ‘a big summer’

Reijnen chase is sign Reds manager will stay as Moyes admits being despondent over a poor end to season

Continue reading...

Wuthering Heights director regrets not showing Margot Robbie’s ‘extremely hairy armpits’

Emerald Fennell says period-realistic scene emphasising Cathy’s lack of razors was shot but did not make final cut

The Wuthering Heights director Emerald Fennell said it was “unfortunate” that a scene showing Margot Robbie’s hairy armpits did not make the final cut, because women in period adaptations are often shown with clean-shaven underarms.

Robbie’s character, Cathy, had “extremely hairy armpits” in the 2026 adaptation of the novel, but “unfortunately the scene that we see them didn’t make it in there”, said the director.

Continue reading...

Billy Vunipola shines as Montpellier demolish Ulster to claim Challenge Cup

  • Montpellier 59-26 Ulster

  • Dominant French side run in nine tries

Ulster’s dreams of claiming a first trophy for 20 years were summarily dashed by a strong Montpellier on a steamy night in Bilbao. Led by a revitalised Billy Vunipola the French side possessed too much power for their opponents and were duly rewarded with their third Challenge Cup triumph in 11 seasons.

Vunipola, who last featured for England at the 2023 World Cup, was at the forefront of an increasingly dominant forward effort which steadily wore Ulster down in energy-sapping conditions. The wing Donovan Taofifénua collected two of his side’s nine tries as Montpellier, currently second in the Top 14 table, claimed the latest trophy of this distinctly French-dominated season.

Continue reading...

VK: Voorpagina

Volkskrant.nl biedt het laatste nieuws, opinie en achtergronden

Grote tegenslag voor Hera United, zelfstandige vrouwenclub degradeert uit eredivisie

Met Tulsi Gabbard vertrekt er weer een vrouw uit Trumps kabinet

Friday Squid Blogging: Regulating Squid Fishing in the South Pacific

The South Pacific Regional Fisheries Management Organization (SPRFMO) needs to regulate squid fishing in the South Pacific.

As usual, you can also use this squid post to talk about the security stories in the news that I haven’t covered.

Blog moderation policy.

404 Media

404 Media is an independent media company founded by technology journalists Jason Koebler, Emanuel Maiberg, Samantha Cole, and Joseph Cox.

Here's the Bodycam Footage of the Cybertruck That Drove Into a Lake

📄
This article was primarily reported using public records requests. We are making it available to all readers as a public service. FOIA reporting can be expensive, please consider subscribing to 404 Media to support this work. Or send us a one time donation via our tip jar here.
Here's the Bodycam Footage of the Cybertruck That Drove Into a Lake

On Monday a man in Grapevine, Texas drove his Tesla Cybertruck into a lake to test the vehicle’s “wade mode.” Police arrested the Cybertruck’s owner, Jimmy Jack McDaniel, after he and his passengers fled the vehicle. 

At one point, the owner tried to get back into the vehicle, and law enforcement responded by deploying jet skis and calling a tow truck to pull the Cybertruck from the water, according to hours of related footage 404 Media obtained. The passengers were German tourists, according to a conversation included in the bodycam footage.

“The charge port is underwater and it [the Cybertruck] thinks it’s plugged in to the charging unit and it won’t let the wheels turn because it thinks it’s charging. And as soon as I can get it a little bit closer to the ground I can drive it out,” McDaniel said during a conversation with a police officer.

0:00
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A cut of the footage obtained by 404 Media. Image: 404 Media.

“Well the wrecker company’s going to tow it out,” the officer said.

McDaniel then explained this was the third time he’d gotten the Cybertruck stuck in water. “The third time you’ve done this?” the officer asked.

“Yes,” McDaniel said.

“Why?” the police asked.The start of McDaniel’s answer is lost as wind blows across the bodycam’s mic. “It doesn’t matter,” he said, then insisted he could drive it once it was out of the water.

404 Media obtained the footage from the Grapevine Police Department through a public records request. Officials from the local fire department are also visible in the footage.

“The vehicle became disabled and took on water. The driver and passengers abandoned the vehicle and the Grapevine Fire Department Water Rescue Team assisted in removing it from the lake. The driver was arrested on charges of Operation of Vehicle in [a] Closed Section of Park/Lake and numerous water safety equipment violations,” the Grapevine Police Department said in a statement published earlier in the week.

According to Tesla’s website, Wade Mode is designed to allow the Cybertruck to “enter and drive through bodies of water, such as rivers or creeks. It is your responsibility to gauge the depth of any body of water before entering. Damage or water ingress to Cybertruck as a result of driving in water is not covered by the warranty.” The maximum depth a Cybertruck can navigate is a little more than 2 and a half feet, according to the website. Grapevine Lake, where the incident took place, has segments that go down 65 feet deep.

The Grapevine Lake incident is just the latest in a series of high profile mishaps involving the Cybertruck. Last summer, a Cybertruck in self-driving mode crashed on an highway overpass near Austin, Texas. In 2024, a Cybetruck got stuck attempting to ford a river in California and had to be pulled out by a Chevy Silverado.

Before they arrested McDaniel, officers explained all the licenses and equipment he needed to legally take a craft into the water. “I wasn’t  thinking about that,” he said. “Obviously I wasn’t thinking at all.”