Mortgage Company Says Hackers Stole Data on 14.6 Million Customers

Hackers stole the sensitive personal information of more than 14.6 million Mr. Cooper customers, the mortgage and loan giant has confirmed. In a filing with Maine’s attorney general’s office, Mr. Cooper said the hackers stole customer names, addresses, dates of birth and phone numbers, as well as customer Social Security numbers and bank account numbers.

Legal Filing Accuses Meta of Using Pirated Books to Train AI Models

Meta Platforms' lawyers had warned it about the legal perils of using thousands of pirated books to train its AI models, but the company did it anyway, according to a new filing in a copyright infringement lawsuit initially brought this summer. The new filing consolidates two lawsuits brought against the Facebook and Instagram owner by comedian Sarah Silverman, Pulitzer Prize winner Michael Chabon and other prominent authors, who allege that Meta has used their works without permission to train its artificial-intelligence language model, Llama.

Report Says UK at High Risk of 'Catastrophic' Ransomware Attack on Infrastructure

The UK is at high risk of a “catastrophic” ransomware attack that could bring critical national infrastructure to a standstill and cost the country tens of billions of pounds, according to a parliamentary report. Departments responsible for national infrastructure across the government are running outdated systems that put them in danger of a breach, said the Joint Committee on the National Security Strategy, or JCNSS. The committee, led by Labour politician Margaret Beckett, accused the government of failing to invest in protections ahead of the upcoming general election.

Apple Requires Judge's Order to Disclose Notification Data to Law Enforcement

Apple has said it now requires a judge's order to hand over information about its customers' push notification to law enforcement, putting the iPhone maker's policy in line with rival Google and raising the hurdle officials must clear to get app data about users. The new policy was not formally announced but appeared sometime over the past few days on Apple's publicly available law enforcement guidelines.

Judge Upholds Texas Law Banning State Workers from Using TikTok

A federal judge in Texas upheld a ban that prevented state employees from using TikTok, the Chinese-owned short-form video app, on government devices and networks, rejecting a challenge by lawyers who argued that the prohibition had violated the First Amendment. In his decision, Judge Robert L. Pitman of the United States District Court for the Western District of Texas said he agreed that the ban had prevented public university faculty from using state-provided devices and networks to research and teach about TikTok, but found that it was a “reasonable restriction” in light of Texas’ concerns about data privacy.

Support for Banning TikTok in U.S. Drops, Even Among Republicans

Americans’ support for a ban of TikTok has crumbled this year, even among Republicans, further undermining a Republican-led push to outlaw the popular video app nationwide. Roughly 38 percent of the U.S. adults polled by Pew Research Center this fall said they supported a federal TikTok ban, down from 50 percent in March, according to a survey.

Sony Investigating Claims by Ransomware Group Targeting Wolverine Game

Sony is investigating claims by the Rhysida ransomware group that it stole sensitive data from Insomniac Games, including personal information for the voice actor who portrayed Peter Parker in Spider-Man 2. Australian outlet Cyber Daily reported that the group had posted some of the data as proof of the hack and is currently auctioning the full set for around $2 million worth of bitcoin.

Epic Games Wins Antitrust Lawsuit Against Google Over App Store

Epic Games won an antitrust lawsuit against Google, in a landmark decision where a jury found Google broke competition laws in how it ran its app store. The decision is a major blow to tech giant and the concept that Big Tech companies should have complete control over how pricing and payments are done on their massive internet platforms.

FTC Examines Antitrust Issues in Microsoft's Investment with OpenAI

The U.S. Federal Trade Commission is examining the nature of Microsoft Corp.’s investment in OpenAI Inc. and whether it may violate antitrust laws, according to a person familiar with the matter. The inquiries are preliminary and the agency hasn’t opened a formal investigation, according to the person, who asked not to be named discussing a confidential matter.

EU Officials Reach Agreement on Law to Regulate Artificial Intelligence

European Union officials reached a landmark deal on the world’s most ambitious law to regulate artificial intelligence, paving the way for what could become a global standard to classify risk, enforce transparency and financially penalize tech companies for noncompliance. At a time when the sharpest critics of AI are warning of its nearly limitless threat, even as advocates herald its benefits to humanity’s future, Europe’s AI Act seeks to ensure that the technology’s exponential advances are accompanied by monitoring and oversight, and that its highest-risk uses are banned.

In FTC's Antitrust Case, Amazon Disputes Allegations of Consumer Harm

The US Federal Trade Commission’s antitrust case against Amazon.com Inc. relies on anecdotal evidence from a handful of online merchants and fails to prove that the online retailer’s practices hurt consumers, the Seattle company’s lawyers argued in a motion to dismiss the complaint. The motion challenges a key assertion made by the agency that Amazon causes prices to go up on competing websites. Online brands and merchants have testified that they don’t offer lower prices on other sites because Amazon, which captures more than one-third of online spending in the US, will punish them by making their products less visible on Amazon.

EU Lawmakers Pause Talks on Artificial Intelligence Act

EU lawmakers halted talks on the bloc's landmark Artificial Intelligence (AI) Act, agreeing to resume discussions after they failed to reach a deal during almost 24 hours of negotiations. The tense three-way debate between European Union member states, the European Commission and the European parliament will now extend into a third day, after weary lawmakers agreed to stop for a rest.

Amazon Sues International Ring of Thieves Linked to Refund Scams

Amazon.com Inc. sued what it called an international ring of thieves who swiped millions of dollars in merchandise from the company through a series of refund scams that included buying products on Amazon and seeking refunds without returning the goods. An organization called REKK advertised its refund services on social media sites, including Reddit and Discord, and communicated with perpetrators on the messaging app Telegram, Amazon said in a lawsuit filed in U.S. District Court in the state of Washington.

Internet Propagandists Manipulate Celebrity Videos for Ukraine Misinformation

Internet propagandists aligned with Russia have duped at least seven Western celebrities, including Elijah Wood and Priscilla Presley, into recording short videos to support its online information war against Ukraine, according to new security research by Microsoft. The celebrities look like they were asked to offer words of encouragement — apparently via the Cameo app — to someone named “Vladimir” who appears to be struggling with substance abuse, Microsoft said.

U.K. Says Russia's Intelligence Service Engaged in Cyberattack Campaign

Russia’s intelligence service has carried out a yearslong cyberattack campaign against high-profile politicians, civil servants, journalists and others, according to the British government, as part of what it called “unsuccessful attempts to interfere in U.K. political processes.” The announcement, part of a joint action with allies including the United States, which announced related indictments and sanctions, was intended to sound the alarm that Russia intends to sow chaos and doubt ahead of elections in the United States and Britain.

Musk Appeals to Supreme Court SEC Order Limiting His Public Communications

Tech billionaire Elon Musk filed a Supreme Court appeal to a Securities and Exchange Commission order that he limit public communications about his businesses, claiming that the 2018 agreement is a “muzzle” on his free speech rights. The case stems from allegations that Musk was influencing the price of Tesla stock with social media posts.