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  • A new variant of COVID-19 may be driving up cases in some parts of the world, WHO says

    A new variant of COVID-19 may be driving up cases in some parts of the world, WHO says

    COVID-19 cases are rising again as a new variant begins to circulate in some parts of the world. The World Health Organization said Wednesday the rise in cases is primarily in the eastern Mediterranean, Southeast Asia and western Pacific regions.

    Airport screening in the United States has detected the new variant in travelers arriving from those regions to destinations in California, Washington state, Virginia and New York.

    The new variant is called NB.1.8.1. It arrives as the United States’ official stance on COVID-19 vaccination is changing. On Tuesday, Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. announced that COVID-19 shots are no longer recommended for healthy children and pregnant women — a move immediately questioned by several public health experts.

    The new variant, increasing globally, had by mid-May reached nearly 11% of sequenced samples reported. The WHO has designated it a “variant under monitoring” and considers the public health risk low at the global level with current vaccines expected to remain effective.

    The WHO said some western Pacific countries have reported increases in COVID cases and hospitalizations, but there’s nothing so far to suggest that the disease associated with the new variant is more severe compared to other variants.

    The variant called LP.8.1 is currently the dominant version in the U.S. and globally. ___

    The Associated Press Health and Science Department receives support from the Howard Hughes Medical Institute’s Science and Educational Media Group and the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation. The AP is solely responsible for all content.

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  • Ancient DNA reveals a new group of people who lived near land bridge between the Americas

    Ancient DNA reveals a new group of people who lived near land bridge between the Americas

    NEW YORK — Scientists have identified a new pod of ancient hunter-gatherers who lived near the land bridge between North America and South America about 6,000 years ago.

    Researchers are still charting how human populations spread across the Americas thousands of years agoarriving first in North America before veering south. Groups that split off developed their own collection of genes that scientists can use to piece together the human family tree.

    Discovered through ancient DNA, the group lived in the high plateaus of present-day Bogotá, Colombia — close to where the Americas meet. Scientists aren’t sure exactly where they fall in the family tree because they’re not closely related to ancient Native Americans in North America and also not linked to ancient or present-day South Americans.

    The new study was published Wednesday in the journal Science Advances.

    “Up to this point, we didn’t believe there was any other lineage that would appear in South America,” said archaeologist Andre Luiz Campelo dos Santos with Florida Atlantic University who was not involved with the new research. “This is unexpected.”

    Just 4,000 years later, these ancient humans were gone and a genetically-different human clan inhabited the area. Scientists aren’t sure exactly what happened to make them fade away — whether they mixed into a new, bigger group or were pushed out entirely.

    Analyzing more genes in South America will help confirm if this new group truly did disappear or if there could be evidence of their descendants elsewhere, said Campelo dos Santos.

    Studying these ancient Colombian genes are important to piecing together the history of the Americas since ancient people had to cross this land bridge to settle in and spread across South America.

    The area is “the gateway to the South American continent,” said study author Andrea Casas-Vargas with the National University of Colombia.

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    The Associated Press Health and Science Department receives support from the Howard Hughes Medical Institute’s Science and Educational Media Group and the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation. The AP is solely responsible for all content.

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  • Vance urges crypto industry to stay involved in politics as he touts Trump administration’s record

    Vance urges crypto industry to stay involved in politics as he touts Trump administration’s record

    Vice President JD Vance praised the cryptocurrency industry Wednesday and urged it to remain active in U.S. politics and policymaking, highlighting the Trump administration’s close ties to a deep-pocketed industry that’s become a powerful force in Washington.

    Speaking at a bitcoin conference in Las Vegas, Vance urged the crypto executives and enthusiasts to keep pressure on Congress to pass pro-crypto legislation supported by the White House.

    “We have a once-in-a-generation opportunity to unleash innovation and use it to improve the lives of countless American citizens,” Vance said in his address. “But if we fail to create regulatory clarity now, we risk chasing this $3 trillion industry offshore in search of a friendly jurisdiction.”

    Vance’s speech comes after Trump promised to make the U.S. the “crypto capital of the planet” when he addressed the same bitcoin conference in Nashville last year in the middle of the presidential campaign. The crypto industry, which felt unfairly attacked by the Biden administration, spent heavily to help Trump and pro-crypto lawmakers win election.

    Vance praised how quickly the crypto industry was able to organize and influence U.S. politics during last year’s election, giving special credit to Cameron and Tyler Winklevoss, the billionaire founders of the crypto exchange Gemini.

    “You chose to speak up and you chose to get involved and I believe you changed the direct trajectory of our country because of it,” Vance told the crowd gathered at the Venetian Hotel.

    Vance hailed crypto as a hedge that can help conservative populists protect themselves against bad politicians, overly aggressive regulators and unethical elites. He predicted its continued assimilation into the financial mainstream and said it was strategically important for the U.S. to be a world leader in the industry, noting that the Chinese government is hostile to crypto.

    Vance also touted the Trump administration’s record at fulfilling the campaign promises made last year.

    As president, Trump has established a strategic bitcoin reserve for the federal government and pardoned Ross Ulbrichtthe founder of Silk Road, a black market website that was key to the early growth of bitcoin. Trump has also staked his administration with outspoken crypto backers while his administration has undone or paused several enforcement actions taken against large crypto companies.

    Several other Trump officials are speakers at the bitcoin conference, as are his sons Don Jr. and Eric. The president and his family’s use of crypto as a platform to make money for the Trump brand has drawn criticism from Democrats and even crypto enthusiasts as corrupt and unseemly.

    The Trump family holds about a 60% stake in World Liberty Financiala crypto project that recently launched its own stablecoin, a fast-growing form of cryptocurrency whose values is often tied to the U.S. dollar. The U.S. Senate advanced legislation earlier this month that creates a federal framework to regulate stablecoins, a bill that Vance said the Trump administration wants passed into law quickly.

    Trump’s media company announced Tuesday that it was raising $2.5 billion to buy bitcoin, the world’s oldest and most popular cryptocurrency. The president and the first lady have also launched their own meme coins, with Trump recently attending a dinner for some of his coins’ biggest investors.

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  • Nvidia overcomes tariff-driven turbulence with Q1 results that eclipse projections

    Nvidia overcomes tariff-driven turbulence with Q1 results that eclipse projections

    SAN FRANCISCO — Artificial intelligence technology bellwether Nvidia overcame a wave of tariff-driven turbulence to deliver another quarter of robust growth amid feverish demand for its high-powered chips that are making computers seem more human.

    The results announced Wednesday for the February-April period came against the backdrop of President Donald Trump’s on-again, off-again trade war that has whipsawed Nvidia and other Big Tech companies riding AI mania to propel their revenue and stock prices upward.

    But Trump’s tariffs — many of which have been reduced or temporarily suspended – hammered the market values of Nvidia and other tech powerhouses heading into the springtime earnings season as investors fretted about the trade turmoil dimming the industry’s prospects.

    Those worries have eased during the past six weeks as most Big Tech companies lived up to or exceeded the analyst projections that steer investors, capped by Nvidia’s report for its fiscal first quarter.

    Nvidia earned $18.8 billion, or 76 cents per share, for the period, a 26% increase from the same time last year. Revenue surged 69% from a year ago to $44.1 billion. If not for a $4.5 billion charge that Nvidia absorbed to account for the U.S. government’s restrictions on its chip sales to China, Nvidia would have made 96 cents per share, far above the 73 cents per share envisioned by analysts.

    In another positive sign, Nvidia predicted its revenue for the May-July period would be about $45 billion, roughly the level that investors had been anticipating. The forecast includes an estimated $8 billion loss in sales to China due to the export controls during its fiscal second quarter, after the restrictions cost it about $2.5 billion in revenue during the first quarter.

    In a conference call with analysts, Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang lamented that the U.S. government had effectively blocked off AI chip sales to China — a market that he estimated at $50 billion. Huang warned the export controls have spurred China to build more of its own chips in a shift that he predicted the U.S. will eventually regret.

    “The U.S. based its policy on the assumption that China cannot make AI chips. That assumption was always questionable, and now it’s clearly wrong,” Huang said.

    Despite Nvidia’s lost opportunities in China, investors were heartened by the company’s first-quarter performance. Nvidia’s shares gained more than 4% in extended trading after the numbers came out. Nvidia’s stock price ended Wednesday’s regular trading session at $134.81, just slightly below where it stood before Trump’s Jan. 20 inauguration. The price had plunged to as low as $86.62 last month during a nosedive that temporarily erased $1.2 trillion in shareholder wealth.

    The outlook began brightening for Nvidia last month after AI leaders such as Microsoft, Alphabet and Meta Platforms reaffirmed their plans to invest heavily in AI. That spending has been a boon for Nvidia because its chipsets provide the technology’s brainpower, an advantage that has helped the company’s annual revenue from $27 billion to $130 billion in just two years.

    Wedbush Securities analyst Dan Ives estimates Big Tech companies will spend about $325 billion on long-term investments primarily revolving around AI this year, with a substantial chunk of that money budgeted for Nvidia’s chips “There is one chip in the world fueling the AI revolution and it’s Nvidia. That narrative is clear from these results,” Ives wrote in a research note.

    Trump’s trade war has been raising doubts about Nvidia’s ability to maintain its astounding momentum by threatening to close off other key markets besides China.

    In apparent attempt to curry favor with the president, Huang last month announced Nvidia will help boost U.S. manufacturing by building some of its AI chips and supercomputers in plants located in Arizona and Texas. Huang also accompanied Trump on a trip to Saudi Arabia earlier this month, signaling Nvidia’s ambitions to sell more of its AI chips in the Middle East as that region attempts to lessen its economy dependence on oil.

    Trump also extended a helping hand to Nvidia of by rescinding the scheduled start export controls that had been drawn up under President Joe Biden’s administration that would have broadened the restrictions on chips sales in foreign markets beyond the limits already in place on deals with China and Russia.

    “The U.S. will always be Nvidia’s largest market and home to the largest installed base of our infrastructure,” Huang said. “Every nation now sees AI as core to the next industrial revolution.”

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  • Texas push to ban minors under 18 from social media fades with time running out

    Texas push to ban minors under 18 from social media fades with time running out

    AUSTIN, Texas — A push in Texas to ban social media accounts for children under 18 faded Thursday after lawmakers did not take a key vote on creating one of the nation’s toughest restrictions aimed at keeping minors off platforms such as TikTok, Snapchat and Instagram.

    The bill, which already passed the GOP-controlled state House, aims to go further than a Florida social media ban for minors under 14. Australia banned social media accounts for anyone under 16.

    But earlier momentum behind the Texas measure slowed at the eleventh hour in the state Senate as lawmakers face a weekend deadline to send bills to Republican Gov. Greg Abbott. Abbott has not said publicly whether he supported the proposed ban, which was opposed by tech trade groups and critics who called it it an unconstitutional limit on free speech.

    “This bill was the best way to protect children in this state,” state Rep. Jared Patterson, a Republican carrying the measure, said Wednesday.

    The legislative session ends Monday. That leaves a narrowing path for the proposal that, if passed, would set up another test of state efforts to set boundaries on how and when children can access social media.

    Many tech companies have established a presence in Texas, including X, which is owned by Elon Musk.

    Earlier this week, Abbott signed into law a separate measure requiring Apple and Google to verify the age of online app store users, as well as parental consent to download apps and make in-app purchases for users under 18. Utah passed a similar bill earlier this year.

    The proposed Texas ban aimed at minors is the latest move in a growing bipartisan push nationwide to address the impacts of social media on the well-being of children. Critics accuse platforms of using addictive functions to lure children onto their site and keep them there, and of not doing enough to curb violent or age-inappropriate content, or online abuse.

    Nearly half of American teenagers say they are online “constantly” despite concerns about the effects of social media and smartphones on their mental health, according to a December 2024 report published by the Pew Research Center.

    The American Psychological Association has called on tech companies and lawmakers to protect children’s mental health, arguing that social media platforms are “particularly risky” to young people who cannot disengage from sites and struggle with impulse control.

    States and countries have passed various measures to address the problem, and some have run into legal challenges.

    A federal judge in 2024 temporarily blocked Utah’s first-in-the-nation law requiring social media companies to check the ages of all users and place restrictions on accounts belonging to minors.

    Californiawhich is home to some of the largest tech companies in the world, will make it illegal for social media platforms to knowingly provide addictive feeds to children without parental consent starting in 2027. And New York state allows parents to block their kids from getting social media posts suggested by a platform’s algorithm.

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  • What have I seen in Liverpool this week? Kindness in person and conspiracies online | Liam Thorp

    What have I seen in Liverpool this week? Kindness in person and conspiracies online | Liam Thorp

    “This doesn’t sound good at all.” The message flashed up on a group chat I am in with other journalists in Liverpool and Merseyside. My blood cooled instantly upon reading it. I have heard those words before and I know what they mean. They mean something has happened. Something big and something bad. It wasn’t long before we all started to realise quite how big and quite how bad.

    After a day of joyous celebration that turned Liverpool into a sea of brilliant red, hundreds of fans were heading back into the city when they looked up to see an ambulance moving through a temporarily pedestrianised route on its way to help a stricken individual. The fans, anxious to assist, moved to the side, when a Ford Galaxy suddenly emerged from behind it and in a few terrible moments, turned elation and harmony into chaos and pain.

    At a time when social media is such an unreliable and often malicious source of information, we had to try to verify exactly what had happened in Water Street and the truly grim clips that emerged made us all fear the absolute worst.

    I am still amazed and relieved that no lives were lost. The news that those who were hospitalised are said to be stable and recovering well is something everyone in this city and beyond will continue to treasure.

    And we are also grateful for the many stories of kindness, generosity and that well-known scouse solidarity that have offered rays of sunshine to combat the dark cloud that Monday evening’s events have left hanging over this unique and vibrant place. On Thursday, Paul Doyle, a 53-year-old man from Liverpool, was charged with multiple offences in connection with the attack and will make his first court appearance on Friday.

    Those qualities of solidarity so in evidence this week will continue to be needed. I’m talking about the dozens of Liverpool pubs that kept their doors open late into the night as people left stranded and separated from loved ones tried to figure out their plans amid the chaos. I’m talking about the cabbies and car owners who flooded social media with offers of free lifts.

    I’m talking about Kerrie and John Davies from Wallasey, who – along with staff from their travel company – ran continual free shuttle buses to help more than 400 people get home from Liverpool city centre. And I’m talking about Ellis Matthewswhose dad was hit by the car as it ploughed along Water Street and who chased after it with many others, bravely putting their own lives at risk as they fought to stop the driver from injuring anyone else.

    There are many, many more examples that show how the people of this city and this region did what they always do: step up when people need them the most. A glance at social media on that frantic night showed the best of humanity – as offers of help poured in – but of course it showed the very worst as well. It wasn’t long before a grim parade of bad faith actors were springing gleefully on to the trauma of what those in Water Street had faced, desperate to stir up hatred, division and chaos in the name of whatever malevolent cause they currently subscribe to.

    Our region knows just how dangerous such actions can be. We saw what happened after Southport. We know the pivotal role that poisonous misinformation played in bringing that hell to our streets. Merseyside police officers were among the first to arrive at those unspeakable scenes in Southport last summer, and some of the same officers found themselves being attacked by bricks from an angry, misinformed mob the next night.

    It is clear that the force was desperate to avoid such turmoil after Monday’s incident in Water Street, and the decision to quickly release the fact that the only suspect was a white British man from Liverpool and that the incident was not being treated as terrorism was entirely understandable and – because of that painful context – the correct one.

    Trouble flares during a protest in Southport, after three children died and eight were injured at a dance school, July 2024. Photograph: Richard McCarthy/PA

    But it won’t be enough for some. There are many operating in the hellscape of social media today who will never be content with any explanation that doesn’t fit their narrative. There are still plenty who are continuing to plaster all kinds of bizarre and unfounded conspiracies across social media in an increasingly desperate bid for validation and engagement – without a second thought for those who are continuing to recover.

    As journalists all we can do to counter this rising torrent of online bile is to report the facts as and when we get them – and only when we know them to be true. We have to hope that the quiet majority will turn to trusted sources at times of uncertainty and trauma.

    One fact we absolutely know to be true is that Liverpool is a resilient city. This is a place with a spirit of mind, character and solidarity forged through the collective painful experiences of Hillsborough, of Thatcher, of austerity. It is a place that has picked itself up off the canvas time and time again – and has done so with extra resolve, with even more fortitude, with another big helping of togetherness.

    That powerful concoction will be badly needed as Liverpool comes to terms with a day of celebration that turned into a night of devastation. But if any city can come together and recover again, we know it is the beautiful one that lies on the banks of the River Mersey.

    The fee for this article will be donated to the fundraiser set up for the victims of Monday’s incident in Liverpool

    • Liam Thorp is political editor at the Liverpool Echo

    • Do you have an opinion on the issues raised in this article? If you would like to submit a response of up to 300 words by email to be considered for publication in our letters section, please click here.

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  • Crypto crime spills over from behind the screen to real-life violence

    Crypto crime spills over from behind the screen to real-life violence

    HARTFORD, Conn. — A man says he was tortured for weeks in a New York townhouse. Another in Paris was held for ransom and his finger cut off. A couple in Connecticut were carjacked, beaten and thrown into a van.

    All, authorities allege, were victims tied to cryptocurrency-related crimes that have spilled out from behind computer screens and into the real world as the largely unregulated currency surges in value.

    While crypto thefts are not new, the use of physical violence is a far more recent trend, said John Griffin, a finance professor at the University of Texas in Austin who tracks financial crimes.

    “I think this kind of physical violence is a natural manifestation of the emboldened nature of crypto activities,” he said. “Things that might clearly be outside of social norms in other spaces — like robbing a bank — are somehow just part of the game here.”

    In the New York case, two American crypto investors — John Woeltz and William Duplessie — have been arrested on kidnapping and assault charges in recent days after a 28-year-old Italian man told police they tortured him for weeks to get his Bitcoin password. Attorneys for both men declined to comment.

    While the allegations are still emerging, they come just weeks after 13 people were indicted on federal charges in Washington, D.C., accused of combining computer hacking and money laundering with old-fashioned impersonation and burglary to steal more than $260 million from victims’ cryptocurrency accounts.

    Some are accused of hacking websites and servers to steal cryptocurrency databases and identify targets, but others are alleged to have broken into victims’ homes to steal their “hardware wallets” — devices that provide access to their crypto accounts.

    The case stemmed from an investigation that started after a couple in Connecticut last year were forced out of a Lamborghini SUV, assaulted and bound in the back of a van. Authorities allege the incident was a ransom plot targeting the couple’s son — who they say helped steal more than $240 million worth of Bitcoin from a single victim. The son has not been charged, but is being detained on an unspecified “federal misdemeanor offense” charge, according to online jail records. Police stopped the carjacking and arrested six men.

    Meanwhile in France, kidnappings of wealthy cryptocurrency holders and their relatives in ransom plots have spooked the industry.

    Attackers recently kidnapped the father of a crypto entrepreneur while he was out walking his dog, and sent videos to the son including one showing the dad’s finger being severed as they demanded millions of euros in ransom, prosecutors allege. Police freed the father and arrested several suspects.

    Earlier this year, men in masks attempted to drag the daughter of Pierre Noizat, the CEO and a founder of the Bitcoin exchange platform Paymium, into a van, but were thwarted by a shopkeeper armed with a fire extinguisher.

    And in January, the co-founder of French crypto-wallet firm Ledger, David Balland, and his wife were also kidnapped for ransom from their home in the region of Cher of central France. They also were rescued by police and 10 people were arrested.

    The FBI recently released its 2024 internet crime report that tallied nearly 860,000 complaints of suspected internet crime and a record $16.6 billion in reported losses — a 33% increase in losses compared with 2023.

    As a group, cryptocurrency theft victims reported the most losses — more than $6.5 billion

    The agency and experts say the crypto crime underworld is likely being fueled by the large amounts of money at stake – combined with weak regulation of cryptocurrency that allows many transactions to be made without identity documents.

    Violence may be increasing for several reasons including that criminals believe they can get away with crypto theft because transactions are hard to trace and often cloaked by anonymity, according to the crypto tracing firm TRM Labs. And crypto holders are getting easier to identify because of the prevalence of personal information online and people flaunting their crypto wealth on social media, the firm says.

    Phil Ariss, TRM Labs’ director of UK public sector relations, said crypto also may be attracting criminal groups that have long used violence.

    “As long as there’s a viable route to launder or liquidate stolen assets, it makes little difference to the offender whether the target is a high-value watch or a crypto wallet,” Ariss said in a statement. “Cryptocurrency is now firmly in the mainstream, and as a result, our traditional understanding of physical threat and robbery needs to evolve accordingly.”

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  • China launches spacecraft it says will yield ‘groundbreaking discoveries’

    China launches spacecraft it says will yield ‘groundbreaking discoveries’

    TAIPEI, Taiwan — China launched a spacecraft that promises to return samples from an asteroid near Mars and yield “groundbreaking discoveries and expand humanity’s knowledge of the cosmos,” the country’s space agency said.

    The Tianwen-2 probe launched early Thursday from southern China aboard the workhorse Long March 3-B rocket. The probe will collect samples from the asteroid 2016HO3 and explore the main-belt comet 311P, which lies even further from the Earth than Mars, according to the China National Space Administration.

    Shan Zhongde, head of the CNSA, was quoted as saying the Tianwen-2 mission represents a ”significant step in China’s new journey of interplanetary exploration” and over its decade-long mission will “yield groundbreaking discoveries and expand humanity’s knowledge of the cosmos.”

    Samples from 2016HO3 are due to be returned in about two years. The asteroids, chosen for their relatively stable orbits, hopefully will offer clues into the formation of earth, such as the origins of water.

    China earlier returned rock samples from the moon’s far side back to Earth in a historic mission and has welcomed international cooperation. However, any cooperation with the U.S. hinges on removing an American law banning direct bilateral cooperation with NASA.

    The near side of the moon is seen from Earth and the far side faces outer space. The far side also is known to have mountains and impact craters and is much more difficult to reach.

    China also operates the three person-crewed Tiangong, or “Heavenly Palace,” space station, making the country a major player in a new era of space exploration and the use of permanent stations to conduct experiments in space, especially since the station was entirely Chinese-built after the country was excluded from the International Space Station over U.S. national security concerns.

    China’s space program is controlled by the People’s Liberation Army, the military branch of the ruling Communist Party.

    The country’s space program has grown rapidly in the more than 20 years since it first put a man in space, only the third country to do so under its own speed. The space agency has landed an unmanned explorer on Mars and a rover on the far side of the moon. It aims to put a person on the moon before 2030.

    A future Tianwen-4 Jupiter mission will explore Jupiter, although details haven’t been released.

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  • Amazon offers ultimate reason to ditch your Ring doorbell and try something new

    Amazon offers ultimate reason to ditch your Ring doorbell and try something new

    If your current video doorbell is starting to age, Amazon is offering a very tempting reason to consider switching to something new. The online retailer is running a flash sale with a swathe of devices now slashed in price, including the very latest Ring. It’s an eye-catching offer with a whopping 40 percent off for a limited time.

    With the cost cut applied, things drop from £99.99 down to just £59.99. Along with it now being a whole lot cheaper to own, there are some other reasons to consider switching things up. This latest Ring, which was announced last year comes packed with upgrades which makes it better at watching over the front of your home.

    There’s full HD video recording for pin-sharp footage and Colour Night Vision for improved visuals when the sun goes down.

    YOU CAN SEE THE RING DEAL HERE

    The latest design makes it easier to fit to your front door, and it quickly snaps and releases to its dock for a faster way to refill the battery.

    This Ring also gets Head-To-Toe recording, so you can see everything happening on the driveway. Other neat upgrades include Quick Replies – which play a selection of pre-recorded messages when the bell is pressed – and Privacy Zones which stops the Ring recording certain areas outside of your home.

    Along with slashing the cost, Amazon is also offering a 30-day free trial of Ring Home. This subscription service offers up to 180 days of Video Event History and improved alerts.

    A basic Ring Home plan costs £4.99 per month – Amazon also offers a Standard plan as well which costs £7.99 per month and comes with some added features such as Alarm Cellular Backup.

    YOU CAN SEE THE RING DEAL HERE

    If you don’t fancy shopping at Amazon, it’s worth noting that other retailers, including Argos, are also selling the latest Ring for the same discounted price.

    It’s also worth remembering that there are plenty of alternatives to Ring, including models made by Swann, Yale and Arlo.

    Another popular choice is Google Nest, although these cameras are out of stock at many retailers. Google’s own store does have the Nest with device featuring a simple way to install along with long battery life intelligent alerts and pin-sharp video recording.

    SEE THE CAMERA HERE

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  • Everyone with email and Facebook accounts put on red alert – check your password

    Everyone with email and Facebook accounts put on red alert – check your password

    Anyone with an email account – or those who use online services such as Facebook, Snapchat and Instagram – needs to be on high alert. It’s just been confirmed that a massive data breach has recently taken place, which appears to have exposed a staggering 180 million unique login credentials. Details that have been leaked include email, social media and gaming passwords, with it thought that Meta, Google and Microsoft accounts may have been exposed in the shock breach.

    The issue was discovered by cybersecurity researcher Jeremiah Fowlerwho says he found an unsecured database containing over 184 million unique login credentials. It’s unclear who else has seen the data, but now is not a time to be complacent.

    “The publicly exposed database was not password-protected or encrypted,” explained Fowler.

    “It contained 184,162,718 unique logins and passwords, totalling a massive 47.42 GB of raw credential data. In a limited sampling of the exposed documents, I saw thousands of files that included emails, usernames, passwords, and the URL links to the login or authorisation for the accounts.

    “The database contained login and password credentials for a wide range of services, applications, and accounts, including email providers, Microsoft products, Facebook, Instagram, Snapchat, Roblox, and many more.”

    Although the database has since been removed from public view, it’s now vital that everyone checks their passwords and considers making some urgent changes.

    If a cyber crook gains both the username and password, it’s easy for them to start hacking accounts and stealing personal data. Switching things up will instantly make accounts much harder to crack.

    It’s also a good time to think about setting up two-factor authentication on accounts, which means nobody can log in without getting a passcode sent to a separate device.

    Speaking about the latest breach, the team at Malwarebytes said: “There is no way to tell whether anyone else found the exposed database before it was removed from public access. However, the exposure of such a massive dataset should serve as a wake-up call.”

    Advice from these security experts has also been issued and you’d be wise to follow these 5 top tips.

    • Change your passwords regularly, and don’t reuse them across multiple accounts. Use unique, complex passwords for every service.

    • Enable two-factor authentication (2FA) wherever possible. This makes it harder for criminals to take over your account.

    • Regularly audit and clean your email inbox of sensitive documents and old passwords. Jeremiah pointed out that “people unknowingly treat their email accounts like free cloud storage and keep years’ worth of sensitive documents, such as tax forms, medical records, contracts, and passwords without considering how sensitive they are.”

    • Use an up-to-date and active anti-malware solution that can detect and remove infostealer malware.

    • Be careful about what you download and educate yourself on recognizing phishing emails, as these remain the most common infection vectors.

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