Maybe you already heard, but Donald Trump will be president of the United States again. The far-right is celebrating by calling for mass executions. The left is responding with their own election conspiracy theories. Convicted January 6 rioters are banking on a pardon. And women who oppose Trump have frankly had enough.
Ahead of Election Day, WIRED found that an “election integrity” app made by True the Vote, a right-wing group that helped popularize election denialism around the 2020 election, was leaking the emails of its users. In one instance it revealed an election officer in California who appeared to be engaged in illegal voter suppression.
Disinformation and other forms of election interference have been a major issue since Russia’s hack of the Democratic National Committee in the lead-up to the 2016 election. But 2024 appears to have been the worst yet, with US officials warning that Russia had amplified its efforts to unprecedented levels.
In non-election news, Canadian authorities arrested Alexander “Connor” Moucka, who is accused of hacking a slew of Snowflake cloud storage customers earlier this year. Security experts who’ve long followed the exploits of a hacker who went by the handle Waifu—whom authorities say is Moucka—believe him to be “one of the most consequential threat actors of 2024.”
A federal judge in Michigan sentenced Richard Densmore to 30 years in prison after he pleaded guilty to sexually exploiting a child. Densmore was highly active in 764, an online criminal network that the FBI now considers to be a “tier one” terrorism threat.
Finally, in WIRED’s first story published in partnership with 404 Media, reporter (and 404 co-owner) Joseph Cox took a deep dive into the world of infostealer malware—the same kind used in all those Snowflake account breaches Moucka is accused of committing.
And that’s not all. Each week, we round up the security and privacy news we didn’t cover in depth ourselves. Click the headlines to read the full stories. And stay safe out there.
Some iPhones that police have in their possession for forensic examination are suddenly rebooting themselves, making it more difficult for investigators to access their contents, reports 404 Media. Police use tools like Cellebrite to essentially hack into phones, but this is typically done when a device is in the so-called After First Unlock (AFU) state. Once they reboot, iPhones are put into Before First Unlock (BFU), which makes them much harder to access with forensic tools.
According to a document obtained by 404, police believed the sudden reboots stemmed from the fact that the devices run iOS 18, Apple’s new mobile operating system. The police suspected that iOS 18 contains a secret feature that allowed the impacted devices, all of which were in airplane mode, to communicate with other nearby iPhones, which sent “a signal to devices to reboot after so much time had transpired since device activity or being off network,” the document reads.
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