Altman Warns Against Using ChatGPT for Confidential Communications

ChatGPT users may want to think twice before turning to their AI app for therapy or other kinds of emotional support. According to OpenAI CEO Sam Altman, the AI industry hasn’t yet figured out how to protect user privacy when it comes to these more sensitive conversations, because there’s no doctor-patient confidentiality when your doc is an AI.

Arizona Woman Gets 8 Years for Helping N. Koreans with Job Scheme

An Arizona woman was sentenced to more than eight years in prison after she pleaded guilty to helping North Korean tech workers secure remote jobs with hundreds of U.S. firms using false identities. Christina Marie Chapman, 50, of Litchfield Park, Ariz., helped North Korean workers gain IT positions at 309 U.S. businesses as part of a scheme that reaped in more than $17 million, mostly for Pyongyang, according to a Justice Department statement.

U.S. Agencies Breached by Hack on Microsoft SharePoint Servers

Hackers exploited a major security flaw in widely used Microsoft server software to launch a global attack on government agencies and businesses in the past few days, breaching U.S. federal and state agencies, universities, energy companies and an Asian telecommunications company, according to state officials and private researchers. The U.S. government and partners in Canada and Australia are investigating the compromise of SharePoint servers, which provide a platform for sharing and managing documents.

Meta Says It Won't Sign Europe's Code of Practice for AI

Meta Platforms Inc. said it won’t sign the code of practice for Europe’s new set of laws governing artificial intelligence, calling the guidelines to help companies follow the AI Act overreach. “Europe is heading down the wrong path on AI,” Meta’s head of global affairs Joel Kaplan said in a post on LinkedIn. “This code introduces a number of legal uncertainties for model developers, as well as measures which go far beyond the scope of the AI Act.”

Lawmaker Warns WhatsApp to 'Prepare to Leave Russian Market'

WhatsApp should prepare to leave the Russian market, a lawmaker who regulates the IT sector said, warning that the messaging app owned by Meta Platforms was likely to be put on a list of restricted software. President Vladimir Putin last month signed a law authorizing the development of a state-backed messaging app integrated with government services, as Russia strives to reduce its dependence on platforms such as WhatsApp and Telegram.

White House Preparing Executive Order Targeting 'Woke' AI Models

White House officials are preparing an executive order targeting tech companies with what they see as “woke” artificial-intelligence models, their latest effort to go after diversity, equity and inclusion initiatives, people familiar with the matter said. The order would dictate that AI companies getting federal contracts be politically neutral and unbiased in their AI models, an effort to combat what administration officials see as liberal bias in some models, the people said.

Russian Law Punishes Users for Searching for 'Extremist Materials'

Russian lawmakers passed controversial legislation that would dramatically expand the government’s ability to punish internet users — not for sharing forbidden content but for simply looking it up. The new measures, which sailed through the Russian parliament and will take effect in September, envision fining people who “deliberately searched for knowingly extremist materials” and gained access to them through means such as virtual private networks, or VPNs, which let users bypass government blocks.

House Passes Regulatory Framework for Cryptocurrency Tokens

The U.S. House of Representatives passed a bill to create a regulatory framework for U.S.-dollar-pegged cryptocurrency tokens known as stablecoins, sending the bill to President Donald Trump, who is expected to sign it into law. The vote marks a watershed moment for the digital asset industry, which has been pushing for federal legislation for years and poured money into last year's elections to promote pro-crypto candidates.

Despite Terms of Service, WeTransfer Says It Won't Use Content to Train AI

The popular filesharing service WeTransfer has said user content will not be used to train artificial intelligence after a change in its service terms had triggered a public backlash. The company, which is regularly used by creative professionals to transfer their work online, had suggested in new terms that uploaded files could be used to “improve machine learning models.”

Crypto Theft Tops $2 Billion in First Half of Year, Exceeding All of 2024

Hackers have stolen more than $2 billion in crypto during the first half of 2025, according to new data from crypto analysis firm Chainalysis, marking the worst year-to-date on record for crypto thefts. The blockchain analysis company said in a new report that the $2.17 billion stolen during the first half of 2025 has already surpassed the amount of crypto lost last year.

Zuckerberg, Former Meta Directors Settle Privacy Suit with Users

Mark Zuckerberg and current and former directors and officers of Meta Platforms agreed to settle claims seeking $8 billion for the damage they allegedly caused the company by allowing repeated violations of Facebook users’ privacy, a lawyer for the shareholders told a Delaware judge. The parties did not disclose details of the settlement and defense lawyers did not address the judge, Kathaleen McCormick of the Delaware Court of Chancery.

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Trial Focuses on Whether Meta Violated FTC Agreement on User Data

An $8 billion trial by Meta Platforms shareholders against Mark Zuckerberg and other current and former company leaders kicks off over claims that they illegally harvested the data of Facebook users in violation of a 2012 agreement with the U.S. Federal Trade Commission. Jeffrey Zients, White House chief of staff under President Joe Biden and a Meta director for two years starting in May 2018, is expected to be one of the first witnesses to take the stand in the non-jury trial before Kathaleen McCormick, chief judge of the Delaware Chancery Court.

Civil Society Organizations Complain to EU About X's User Data

Elon Musk's X social media platform has been hit by complaints by nine civil society organizations to EU and French regulators over what they say is its use of users' data for targeted advertising that may breach EU tech rules. The organizations — AI Forensics, the Centre for Democracy and Technology Europe, Entropy, European Digital Rights, Gesellschaft für Freiheitsrechte e.V. (GFF), Global Witness, Panoptykon Foundation, Stichting Bits of Freedom and VoxPublic — said they took their complaint to the European Commission and the French media regulator Arcom.

Former U.S. Army Soldier Pleads Guilty to Hacking Telecom Databases

A former U.S. Army soldier pleaded guilty to hacking telecommunications companies' databases, stealing records, and demanding ransoms for the stolen data, the U.S. Department of Justice said. Cameron John Wagenius, 21, defrauded at least 10 organizations by obtaining login credentials for their private computer networks, stealing data, and attempting to extort at least $1 million from the targets, according to the DOJ.