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      No 10 tells MPs to be cautious about unsolicited messages after attempted ‘honeytrap’

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian · Monday, 8 April - 14:42

    Message comes as pressure builds on Tories to take disciplinary action against MP William Wragg

    Downing Street has urged MPs to be cautious when responding to unsolicited messages, after the “spear-phishing” attack that targeted more than a dozen MPs, staff and journalists working in Westminster.

    Number 10 issued the warning on Monday morning, days after two police forces launched an investigation into what is being described as an attempted “ honeytrap ”.

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      Comment masquer son statut en ligne et la confirmation de lecture dans WhatsApp ?

      news.movim.eu / JournalDuGeek · Monday, 8 April - 09:16

    WhatsApp application

    Depuis plusieurs années maintenant, les services de messagerie instantanée sont devenus des outils indispensables à nos vies quotidiennes, plus encore que les SMS ne l'ont été fut un temps. S'il en existe des centaines, les noms qui reviennent le plus souvent sont évidemment Messenger, iMessage et WhatsApp.
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      The Westminster honeytrap was too easy to set for our WhatsApp-addicted MPs | Observer editorial

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian · Sunday, 7 April - 05:30

    Politicians believed the illusion of privacy and safety, but government by such apps undermines democracy

    The “honeytrap” scandal in Westminster brings to mind Bertrand Russell’s observation about democracy having “at least one merit, namely, that a Member of Parliament cannot be stupider than his constituents, for the more stupid he is, the more stupid they were to elect him”.

    For William Wragg’s constituents in Manchester, though, it must come as a consolation to discover that they are not the only ones who could fall for phishing messages, though theirs are more likely to come via email from distressed Nigerian heiresses rather than on encrypted platforms such as WhatsApp, which give its users an illusion of privacy and safety. But while the embarrassment of a few Westminster insiders provides endless opportunities for tabloid amusement, it masks a more serious problem: the way the pathological addiction to WhatsApp of Britain’s ruling elite has undermined democratic institutions and conventions.

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      This post is public

      www.theguardian.com /commentisfree/2024/apr/07/the-observer-view-on-honeytrap-scandal-government-whatsapp-addict

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      Who is behind the Westminster WhatsApp ‘honeytrap’ stings?

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian · Friday, 5 April - 15:57

    Senior figures suggest a foreign state, others believe a political insider is the more likely culprit

    British MPs have been the target of a honeytrap with explicit messages from anonymous WhatsApp accounts, to gain their trust before convincing at least one serving MP to hand over intimate pictures of themselves. What’s not known is who is behind these messages, what their motive is, and what they will do with the photographs of those politicians.

    On Thursday, Tory MP William Wragg admitted giving the personal phone numbers of fellow MPs to a person he met on the Grindr dating app. He said he had sent photographs of himself to the individual and feared what they would do with the pictures if he didn’t comply.

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      WhatsApp est en panne : ce n’est pas que vous

      news.movim.eu / Numerama · Wednesday, 3 April - 18:26

    WhatsApp est en panne en France, d'après plusieurs signalements. Panne que nous avons constatée à la rédaction.

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      At least a dozen Westminster insiders targeted in Whatsapp phishing attack

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian · Wednesday, 3 April - 17:56

    Politicians, including a minister, advisers and journalists received potentially compromising messages over six-month period

    More than a dozen politicians, advisers and journalists have been targeted in a phishing attack, in what cybersecurity experts believe is an attempt to compromise them.

    Twelve men working in Westminster, including a serving government minister, told Politico they had received unsolicited WhatsApp messages from two suspicious mobile numbers in the past six months.

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      Comment identifier les principales arnaques WhatsApp et se protéger

      news.movim.eu / JournalDuGeek · Monday, 1 April - 13:00

    Whatsapp

    Les arnaques sur WhatsApp prennent de l'ampleur, les escrocs exploitent la confiance des utilisateurs pour dérober de l'argent ou des données personnelles. Plusieurs techniques frauduleuses ont été mises au jour : apprenez à les détecter et à vous défendre.
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      Conspiracy, monetisation and weirdness: social media has become ungovernable | Nesrine Malik

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian · Monday, 1 April - 05:00 · 1 minute

    The royals are perennial clickbait, but the wild online bunkum over the Princess of Wales hints at new and darker forces

    On TikTok, there is a short clip of what an AI voiceover claims is a supposed “ring glitch” in the video in which Princess of Wales reveals her cancer diagnosis. It has 1.3 million views. Others, in which users “break down” aspects of the video and analyse the saga with spurious evidence, also rack up millions of views and shares. I have then seen them surface on X, formerly known as Twitter, and even shared on WhatsApp by friends and family, who see in these videos, presented as factual and delivered in reporter-style, nothing that indicates that this is wild internet bunkum.

    Something has changed about the way social media content is presented to us. It is both a huge and subtle shift. Until recently, types of content were segregated by platform. Instagram was for pictures and short reels, TikTok for longer videos, X for short written posts. Now Instagram reels post TikTok videos, which post Instagram reels, and all are posted on X. Often it feels like a closed loop, with the algorithm taking you further and further away from discretion and choice in who you follow. All social media apps now have the equivalent of a “For you” page, a feed of content from people you don’t follow, and which, if you don’t consciously adjust your settings, the homepage defaults to. The result is that increasingly, you have less control over what you see.

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