Latest Episode
May 28 2000 UTC Brief
In cyber and crypto
India’s CERT-In is telling companies to patch critical internet-facing flaws within 12 hours, a sign that defenders are being asked to move at the speed of the attackers for once. Security experts are also warning that fast-spreading AI agents are creating a much larger attack surface, which means companies need a broader system-level approach before they hand them the keys.
In crypto, the U.S. sanctioned networks tied to the Sinaloa Cartel, while the U.K. sanctioned a HTX-linked entity. Separately, there were reports of a shutdown at Syndicate Labs, a Missouri lawsuit against CoinFlip, a bounty deal involving the Verus attacker, an exploit at StablR, and malicious packages targeting crypto developers’ systems. The FBI also warned that fake FIFA websites are already circulating ahead of the 2026 World Cup, because criminals do love a deadline with a giant audience.
In U.S. politics and law enforcement
The Trump administration is suing Maine, Massachusetts, Oregon, and Washington after they refused to issue confidential license plates for ICE agents. The Justice Department says other law enforcement agencies have long used similar plates for undercover work, and ICE wants them for arrests tied to Trump’s immigration crackdown.
Separately, people familiar with the matter say a Justice Department inquiry involving E. Jean Carroll is actually part of a broader investigation into a Reid Hoffman-backed nonprofit, American Future Republic. Carroll is not the subject of the probe, though the case is connected to her deposition and the group that helped fund her lawsuits against Trump. In Memphis, community observers say the Trump-ordered anti-crime task force has retaliated against people monitoring its activity, including tailing cars, surveilling homes, using excessive force, and falsely arresting one observer.
In the Middle East
Negotiators have reached a tentative cease-fire agreement between the United States and Iran, but it still needs approval from both governments before it takes effect. Oil prices slipped on the reports, with traders reacting to the possibility of a calmer Strait of Hormuz, which is nice for markets and deeply inconvenient for everyone who enjoys a little geopolitical suspense.
In Latin America and Africa
At least 52 guerrilla fighters were killed in clashes in Colombia’s Guaviare department, where rival armed groups are fighting for control of a strategic cocaine production and trafficking corridor near Barranco Colorado. In South Africa, anti-migrant protests are intensifying, with thousands of foreign workers facing growing pressure to leave the country.
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