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14 Nov 2025 UPD: We have updated the article with more information on the bailiff reports sent to us and the person who ordered them.
The FBI has been investigating Archive.is (also known as Archive.today), as was recently revealed. The agency issued a subpoena to the site’s domain registrar, asking for information about the person behind it, citing a “federal criminal investigation.”
Archive.is was launched in 2012 by someone using the name Denis Petrov — though whether that’s their real identity remains unclear. The site lets users save “snapshots” of web pages by submitting URLs, which makes it a valuable tool for preserving content that might otherwise disappear. But because it can also be used to bypass paywalls, it’s long been a thorn in the side of many media organizations.
While the exact nature of the FBI investigation hasn’t been confirmed, it is speculated it can be related to copyright or CSAM (child sexual abuse material) dissemination issues. Altogether, the situation suggests growing pressure on whoever runs Archive.is, and on intermediaries that help make its service accessible. AdGuard DNS, as it turns out, may have just become one such pressure point.
A few weeks ago, we were contacted by a representative of an organization called the Web Abuse Association Defense, a French group claiming to fight against child pornography. Their website is webabusedefense.com, and here is the archived version as of November 7.
They demanded that we block the domain archive.today (and its mirrors) in AdGuard DNS, alleging that the site’s admin had refused to remove illegal content since 2023. To be clear, Archive.today allows users to take “snapshots” of any webpages, including potentially illegal material. In such cases, it’s the site admin’s job to respond to complaints and promptly remove that content.
This struck us as strange — we’re not a hosting provider, and it seemed unusual for an infrastructure-level service like ours to be asked to take action like this.
Soon after, the situation escalated into what we could only describe as direct threats:
We won’t share all the screenshots here, but there were several similar messages.
We sought legal advice, and unfortunately discovered that French law, specifically Article 6-I-7 of the Loi pour la Confiance dans l’Économie Numérique (LCEN), might actually require us to respond and apply blocking measures, at least for French users.
That said, this whole situation shows just how inadequate this regulation is. Such decisions should be made by a court — a private company shouldn’t have to decide what counts as “illegal” content under threat of legal action.
Even so, the story didn’t quite add up. Since someone was trying to pressure us into taking action, we decided to contact the other side, Archive.today, directly.
We sent an email to Archive.today’s contact address and asked two simple questions:
Can they remove the illegal content from the URLs we were informed about?
Is it true that they refused to remove such content in the past, and had they been notified about it before?
They replied within a few hours. The response was straightforward: the illegal content would be removed (and we verified that it was), and they had never received any previous notifications about those URLs.
Moreover, they hinted that Archive.today had been targeted by a campaign of “serial” complaints, supposedly from French organizations, sent to various companies and institutions that could potentially harm the site. They even shared a link demonstrating a complaint similar to the one we had received.
At that point, things were looking increasingly odd, so we decided to dig deeper into the “complainant.”
The Web Abuse Association Defense website references several well-known organizations — Europol, OFAC, NCA — yet provides no details or evidence of any cooperation with them.
The association itself was registered in February–March 2025, around the same time its website appeared. There is very little public information about it. Interestingly, registering an association in France can apparently be done entirely online and does not require proof of identity.
The association is registered at an address used for mass company registration, which isn’t inherently problematic but it does indicate that the entire registration process could have been carried out online by a single person.
Its Twitter/X account appeared only recently — in August 2025. It has just four followers, and its feed consists of just a few reposts.
None of this proves anything by itself, but something still doesn’t add up. In their first email, the “head” of the association claimed that their correspondence with Archive.today started with a bailiff report from 2023. That timeline simply doesn’t fit.
We examined the so-called “bailiff reports” they had sent us as evidence. It’s important to note that these aren’t bailiff reports in the English sense — they’re “constat d’huissier sur Internet,” official records of online content such as webpages, posts, or videos. These particular reports were ordered online via the service called Qualijuris, and, based on the timestamps, most of them were also created in August 2025 — not 2023.
Only two of these bailiff reports were ordered in 2023 from a similar service. What’s interesting is that they weren’t ordered by WAAD. The name of the person who ordered these bailiff reports matches the name that appears in the correspondence shared with us by the Archive.today administrator — the same one he wrote about on X in 2024. In that case, the complaint appeared to come from a real lawyer — but someone had registered a domain with the lawyer’s surname, containing nothing but a redirect to the lawyer’s actual website, and did it on the same day the complaint was sent. The domain was used solely to send the emails and it is not active anymore. Interestingly, that email also invoked the LCEN law.
So what is the link between WAAD and that lawyer from before? Are these bailiff reports real and could it be that this is a case of impersonation of a real person? We don’t know yet, but we hope to discover the truth soon enough.
Unfortunately, we couldn’t dig any deeper about who exactly is behind WAAD. The domain webabusedefense.com is registered with name.com, but ownership information (including historical records) is hidden. They use ProtonMail for email, so that’s another dead end. The site itself is behind Cloudflare, making further tracing impossible.
With everything said and done, here’s where things stand now:
The illegal content was promptly removed from Archive.today after we notified them.
The complaints against the site look extremely suspicious. In our case, they came from an organization that was only recently registered that seems deliberately set up to hide the identities of those behind it.
The sample complaint shared by Archive.today’s admin shows signs of impersonating a real person. We have contacted the person in question and are currently waiting for a reply.
In both our case and that other example, the recipients were pressured to act under the French LCEN law. However, that same law also provides penalties for false reports:
Art. 6-I-4 LCEN:
4. Any person who presents content or activity to the persons referred to in paragraph 2 as being illegal with the aim of having it removed or its dissemination stopped, when they know this information to be inaccurate, shall be punished by one year’s imprisonment and a fine of €15,000.
We believe there are indications of criminal behavior here that should be investigated by law enforcement. Therefore, we will file an official complaint with the French police, including all relevant details.
All this is unfolding amid reports of an FBI investigation into the owner of Archive.today. It seems that this investigation may be related to CSAM hosting. While we can’t confirm any connection between that case and ours, the timing is certainly suspicious.
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Read the original on adguard-dns.io »
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Read the original on aistudio.google.com »
Every minute, a new clock is displayed that has been generated by nine different AI models.
Each model is allowed 2000 tokens to generate its clock. Here is its prompt:
Create HTML/CSS of an analog clock showing ${time}. Include numbers (or numerals) if you wish, and have a CSS animated second hand. Make it responsive and use a white background. Return ONLY the HTML/CSS code with no markdown formatting.
Created by Brian Moore. You can also follow him on Instagram. Idea inspired by Matthew Rayfield.
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Read the original on clocks.brianmoore.com »
LibrePods unlocks Apple’s exclusive AirPods features on non-Apple devices. Get access to noise control modes, adaptive transparency, ear detection, hearing aid, customized transparency mode, battery status, and more - all the premium features you paid for but Apple locked to their ecosystem.
Most features should work with any AirPods. Currently, I’ve only got AirPods Pro 2 to test with.
* Noise Control Modes: Easily switch between noise control modes without having to reach out to your AirPods to long press
* Ear Detection: Controls your music automatically when you put your AirPods in or take them out, and switch to phone speaker when you take them out
* Head Gestures: Answer calls just by nodding your head
* Features marked with an asterisk require the Bluetooth DID (Device Identification) hook to be enabled.
See the pinned issue for a complete feature list and roadmap.
for the old version see the Linux README. (doesn’t have many features, maintainer didn’t have time to work on it)
If you are using ColorOS/OxygenOS 16, you don’t need root for basic features! You will still not be able to customize transparency mode and setup hearing aid, and use Bluetooth Multipoint. For everyone else:
You must have a rooted device with Xposed to use LibrePods on Android. This is due to a bug in the Android Bluetooth stack. Please upvote the issue by clicking the ‘+1’ icon on the IssueTracker page.
There are no exceptions to the root requirement until Google/your OEM figures out a fix.
Until then, you must xposed. I used to provide a non-xposed method too, where the module used overlayfs to replace the bluetooth library with a locally patched one, but that was broken due to how various devices handled overlayfs and a patched library. With xposed, you can also enable the DID hook enabling a few extra features.
Turns out, if you change the manufacturerid to that of Apple, you get access to several special features!
Upto two devices can be simultaneously connected to AirPods, for audio and control both. Seamless connection switching. The same notification shows up on Apple device when Android takes over the AirPods as if it were an Apple device (“Move to iPhone”). Android also shows a popup when the other device takes over.
Accessibility settings like customizing transparency mode (amplification, balance, tone, conversation boost, and ambient noise reduction), and loud sound reduction can be configured.
All hearing aid customizations can be done from Android, including setting the audiogram result. The app doesn’t provide a way to take a hearing test because it requires much more precision. It is much better to use an already available audiogram result.
To enable these features, enable App Settings -> act as Apple Device.
Due to recent AirPods’ firmware upgrades, you must enable Off listening mode to switch to Off. This is because in this mode, louds sounds are not reduced.
If you have take both AirPods out, the app will automatically switch to the phone speaker. But, Android might keep on trying to connect to the AirPods because the phone is still connected to them, just the A2DP profile is not connected. The app tries to disconnect the A2DP profile as soon as it detects that Android has connected again if they’re not in the ear.
When renaming your AirPods through the app, you’ll need to re-pair them with your phone for the name change to take effect. This is a limitation of how Bluetooth device naming works on Android.
If you want the AirPods icon and battery status to show in Android Settings app, install the app as a system app by using the root module.
This program is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation, either version 3 of the License, or any later version.
This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU General Public License for more details.
You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License along with this program. If not, see https://www.gnu.org/licenses/.
All trademarks, logos, and brand names are the property of their respective owners. Use of them does not imply any affiliation with or endorsement by them. All AirPods images, symbols, and the SF Pro font are the property of Apple Inc.
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Read the original on github.com »
Mozilla is developing a built‑in AI assistant for Firefox that will be offered as a third browsing mode alongside Normal and Private tabs. They’re calling it “Window AI.”
Details are still scarce. Based on Mozilla’s official announcement on Thursday (13th), it looks like a deeper implementation than the existing sidebar that gives access to third‑party chatbots (ChatGPT, Gemini, Copilot, etc.). The post stresses the feature will be opt-in and that the user “is in control.”
There’s a waitlist to try the feature and a Mozilla forum thread inviting people to “help shape” the initiative.
It’s safe to say that the people who volunteered to “shape” the initiative want it dead and buried. Of the 52 responses at the time of writing, *all* rejected the idea and asked Mozilla to stop shoving AI features into Firefox.
I don’t know whether the negative reactions reflect the majority of Firefox users or are just a noisy minority. Mozilla, after all, likely has a clearer view of the whole user base.
What strikes me as odd is the decision to position itself as just another AI‑enabled web browser, picking a fight with big techs and better‑funded startups whose users are less hostile (and sometimes enthusiastic) about adding AI to web browsing.
Mozilla seems to be trying to wedge itself between those who reject AI and those who want generative‑AI features in the browser — trying to please everyone — as this excerpt from the post shows:
We see a lot of promise in AI browser features making your online experience smoother, more helpful, and free from the everyday disruptions that break your flow. But browsers made by AI companies ask you to make a hard choice — either use AI all the time or don’t use it at all.
We’re focused on making the best browser, which means recognizing that everyone has different needs. For some, AI is part of everyday life. For others, it’s useful only occasionally. And many are simply curious about what it can offer, but unsure where to start.
Regardless of your choice, with Firefox, you’re in control.
Those unhappy have another option: use an AI‑free Firefox fork such as LibreWolf, Waterfox, or Zen Browser.
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Read the original on manualdousuario.net »
TLDR: I built a portable step-sequencer synthesizer for my daughter’s third birthday. It has four sliders that control four notes in a looping sequence. Slide up = higher pitch, slide down = lower.
It’s a child-friendly, tactile music toy. Here’s the pink edition in action:
My daughter received a Montessori activity board full of switches and LEDs for her first birthday. Watching her twist knobs and flip the switches reminded me of the control surface of a synth, and I wondered if I could build a musical version - something simple, tactile, and creative that didn’t require holding down buttons to keep the sound going. A year later I finally decided to build it. I had no prior hardware experience, so this became an excuse to learn about microcontrollers, CAD, PCB design, and 3D printing.
I started the project with a 15 year old Arduino Inventors Kit and only a vague idea about how to use it. The first goal was simple: build a basic MIDI controller on a breadboard. If I could get some potentiometer readings, map them to 12 discrete values - one for each note in an octave - and emit MIDI messages, I would have taken a small step in the right direction. Adding an onboard synth module and designing a pretty box to put it in could wait until later.
Reading the potentiometer inputs and turning them into the MIDI messages using the Arduino MIDI library was easy enough. To hear the output, I wrote a small Python script that intercepted the MIDI messages and forwarded them to my Mac’s default MIDI device, which Logic Pro could pick up. That let me “play” the breadboard through software instruments.
Once I had the hang of wiring up potentiometers and rotary encoders, the next step was to move the audio synthesis from Logic to my breadboard. For this I used a little $12.95 SAM2695 synthesiser module with an integrated amplifier and speaker. Its inner workings remain a mystery to me but it does what I need it to and I was happy reduce the amount of time to get a functioning prototype into my daughter’s hands. I also moved to an Elegoo Nano here due to its low cost and increased number of analog pins.
Next, I added small OLED screen to provide some visual feedback and character and used the handy u8g2 graphics library. This was trickier than I expected: the Nano has so little RAM that I couldn’t buffer a full frame. I had to update the screen in small patches, and large updates were slow enough that they occasionally interfered with encoder reads, and caused laggy notes at faster tempos. I’ve still got some work to do to iron out blocking screen updates, but for now I pushed through and accepted a bit of lag. I added a little dancing panda that I adapted from one I found in a pixel art tutorial which I can no longer find - if you’re the original creator, please let me know so I can credit you!
For developing on-the-go, I discovered the Wokwimicrocontroller simulator. It let me build a virtual schematic and test code without luggin around the my fragile prototype. They have a free online simulator and a paid VS Code plugin that lets you create your diagrams in the IDE.
Once I had a functional circuit it was time to move on to designing an enclosure and assembling a complete version of the synthesiser that my daughter could play with.
After wiring up the breadboard, the next hurdle was figuring out how to build a proper enclosure. I looked for off-the-shelf cases, but nothing matched the size I needed, and everything seemed to come in either black or beige. So I decided to learn some basic CAD and 3D-print the enclosure on a friend’s Bambu Labs A1 Mini.
I downloaded Fusion 360 and started following tutorials. With only an hour or two to spare in the evenings, progress was slow at first. I’d never used any CAD software before, so I was constantly switching between learning the software and trying to make actual progress on the design. For other beginners, I highly recommend Product Design Online’s Learn Fusion 360 in 30 Days and this excellent video by wermy.
After a few weeks of trial-and-error, I finally had a design I could print:
Thank you Tom for printing these! A year’s supply of filament coming your way.
Moving the circuit to a proper PCB felt daunting, so for the first version I hand-wired everything on a solderable breadboard. The good: hanging out and drinking some wine with my friend, who kindly offered to help with the soldering. The bad: when the time finally came to close the two halves of the enclosure, stuffing the rats nest of wires inside ended up putting pressure on a bunch of the delicate soldered joints and breaking them. My daughter could play around a bit with it - enough for me to convince myself that she’d genuinely enjoy using it - but it was fragile. I also wanted to make a few units for friends, which meant I needed something more robust and faster to assemble. Time to design a PCB.
Romain, I definitely owe you a bottle or two…
Once again I was back on YouTube and fumbling my way through an unfamiliar workflow, though I stuck with Fusion 360 which has its own electronics design suite. For my first attempt I decided that I’d focus on surface-mounting the various components and save integrating the microcontroller into the board for a future project. A large chunk of the time here was spent reading datasheets, sourcing parts and importing their footprints/models into Fusion 360. Once I had learned the basics, I was able to route the circuit on a 2-layer board. One of the nice things about Fusion is that you get a full 3D model of the assembled PCB, which makes designing the enclosure much easier.
When I was finished, I exported the PCB design file and uploaded it to JLCPCB. Five boards (the minimum order) cost £35.41 including shipping, and they arrived five days later. It blows my mind that this is possible.
For my first version I had decided to use 4 AA batteries and use the Arduino’s built-in voltage converter to provide a steady 5 volts. Something I overlooked, however, is that the Arduino’s VIN pin that provides a regulated 5V to the board requires 7-12V input, while my batteries will provide, at best, 6V when new. The board seemed to work OK at this voltage but it would be vulnerable to random resets as the voltage starts to sag and a short battery life.
For the next iteration I decided to get rid of one of the batteries and introduce an Adafruit Miniboost to provide a regulated 5V power supply to the Arduino from the combine 4.5V from the three AA batteries. This allowed me to reduce the weight a little bit and provide the synth with a stable supply of power for a longer duration.
Finally, I updated the enclosure so that I could securely attach the PCB and added a neat little battery compartment. I also added a small bezel to raise the height of OLED display.
It’s been just over a week since my daughter unwrapped her new synth. It now lives on the shelf with her other toys, and so far it gets regular use and is holding up well. One of my goals was to make something fun to fiddle with at a superficial level, but with enough depth to stay interesting as she gets older. The first part seems true, and I’ll see how the second plays out over the coming months. There are still a few kinks to iron out, such as the lag when updating the screen. I’m also planning to upgrade the Elegoo Nano to an ESP32, which should simplify the firmware and open up more options for fun display graphics.
After watching a few children and adults (musical and non-musical) play with it, I think there might be the germ of a real product here. With a better synth engine, audio outputs, and a way to chain multiple units together, it could be a playful introduction to electronic music for older kids - maybe even adults. However, adding features is one thing, but actually bringing a product to market is another. The challenges aren’t just technical: they’re regulatory and financial. Safety certification (UKCA/CE, and FCC in the US) can cost £5-10K or more. Manufacturing is another hurdle. A 3D-printed enclosure is fine for a prototype, but a real product likely needs injection-molded parts, which require expensive tooling. Even a small production run would need more upfront capital than I can sensibly invest right now.
For the moment I’m treating it as a learning project, but the response so far has been encouraging. A more polished open-source version for makers, or possibly a small Kickstarter campaign, might be viable next steps. If anyone reading this has experience bringing small-run hardware to market, I’d love to hear from you.
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Read the original on bitsnpieces.dev »
A report was recently published by an AI-research company called Anthropic. They are the ones who notably created Claude, an AI-assistant for coding. Personally, I don’t use it but that is besides the point. Before we start, it’s important to say I don’t have anything against them, or AI in general. I do have some documented concerns but I am not “Anti-AI”, or whatever. Rather than the technology itself, it’s the industry’s perception of it, and the way it is inserted everywhere, even when unnecessary that bothers me. However, that too is a bit besides the point.
Today, I wanted to discuss the Paper (or Report, however you want to call it) that was recently published by them. Looking at the executive summary, this paragraph jumps out immediately.
In mid-September 2025, we detected a highly sophisticated cyber espionage operation conducted by a Chinese state-sponsored group we’ve designated GTG-1002 that represents a fundamental shift in how advanced threat actors use AI. Our investigation revealed a well-resourced, professionally coordinated operation involving multiple simultaneous targeted intrusions. The operation targeted roughly 30 entities and our investigation validated a handful of successful intrusions.
This is extremely interesting for many reasons:
* Anthropic seemingly disrupted an APT’s campaign, though a number of companies and government entities were affected,
* This highly-advanced APT doesn’t use its own infra, but rather relies on Claude to coordinate its automation (??? Why, though ?),
* I assume they run exploits and custom tools ? If so, what are these ?
* Anthropic was able to attribute this attack to a Chinese-affiliated state-sponsored group.
If you’re like me, you then eagerly read the rest of the paper, hoping to find clues and technical details on the TTPs (Tactics, Techniques and Procedures), or IoCs (Indicators of Compromise) to advance the research. However, the report very quickly falls flat, which sucks.
The primary goal of a Threat-Intelligence report such as this one would be to inform other parties of a new type of attack, and artefacts they might use to discover the attack on their network. This is typically done by sharing domain-names linked with the campaign, MD5 or SHA512 hashes you could look for on Virus Exchange websites such as VirusTotal, or other markers that would help you verify that your networks are safe. As an example, here is the French CERT sharing (in French, but an English version is available too) about APT28’s TTPs.
We can see:
* MITRE ATT&CK used to determine what are the techniques used (eg: Account Manipulation, Antivirus evasion, etc.),
* Emails used for phishing, originating IPs and even date when these emails are sent,
* Tooling (VPN software, but also what kind of tools) used by the APT,
This report is just one I picked randomly by skimming through their publications. Any serious CERT or Threat-Intel company would publish things in the same fashion, because this is the industry standard. These publications are made public to inform Security Operation Centers around the world about how to detect and prevent those attacks.
In this case, none of the these markers are present in the report. In fact, not a whole lot of the information is verifiable, which is another problem.
The human operator tasked instances of Claude Code to operate in groups as autonomous penetration testing orchestrators and agents, with the threat actor able to leverage AI to execute 80-90% of tactical operations independently at physically impossible request rates
This figure (80-90%) is not verifiable either. How do we know this is actually the case ? I have no doubt so-called Autonomous agents are being used in these campaigns, in some capacity. However this report clearly states that Autonomous Agents perform active exploitation, and even data exfiltration.
What kind of tooling is used ? What kind of information has been extracted ? Who is at risk ? How does a CERT identifies an AI agent in their networks ? None of these questions are answered. It’s not like Anthropic doesn’t have access to this data, since they claim they were able to stop it.
Upon receiving authorization from the human operators, Claude executed systematic credential collection across targeted networks. This involved querying internal services, extracting authentication certificates from configurations, and testing harvested credentials across discovered systems.
How ? Did it run Mimikatz ? Did it access Cloud environments ? We don’t even know what kind of systems were affected. There is no details, or fact-based evidence to support these claims or even help other people protect their networks.
The report goes on to claim that upon detection, the accounts were closed and implemented “enhancements”, and then drops this gem:
We notified relevant authorities and industry partners, and shared information with impacted entities where appropriate.
What is that even supposed to mean ? You claim your agents were able to find exploitable vulnerabilities in multiple services. Were these patched ? What about the extracted data ? What about the affected people ? Do you care about this at all ?
Look, is it very likely that Threat Actors are using these Agents with bad intentions, no one is disputing that. But this report does not meet the standard of publishing for serious companies. The same goes with research in other fields. You cannot just claim things and not back it up in any way, and we cannot as an industry accept that it’s OK for companies to release this.
There seem to be a pattern for Tech Companies (especially in AI, but they’re not the only culprits) out there to just announce things, generate hype and then under-deliever. Just because it works with VCs doesn’t mean it should work with us. We should, as an industry, expect better.
For instance, it attributes the attacks to a Chinese State-affiliated (!!!) group, but does not go on to give any details. Which APT is it ? What helped you determine this ?
Attribution is a very serious matter, with sometimes diplomatical implications. You can’t just go on and point the finger at anyone and expect people to believe you for no reason. In a time of increasing tensions between the West and China, it does not seem like the smart thing to do at all. Frankly, I don’t understand who was stupid enough to approve this to be released. For all we know, the “advanced threat actors” they’re talking about here could just be script kiddies trying to automate ffuf and sqlmap commands.
If they’re going to release IoCs and proof of everything, I’d be happy to share them here. But until them, I will say this: this paper would not pass any review board. It’s irresponsible at best to accuse other countries of serious things without backing it up. Yes, I am aware that Chinese-linked APTs are out there and very aggressive, and Yes, I am aware that Threat Actors misuse LLMs all the time, but that is besides the point. We need fact-based evidence. We need to be able to verify all this. Otherwise, anyone can say anything, on the premise that it’s probably happening. But that’s not good enough.
So if the report does not give any details on TTPs and detections, what was the purpose of this report exactly ?
There is a paragraph at the end that seem to give us a clue:
The cybersecurity community needs to assume a fundamental change has occurred: Security teams should experiment with applying AI for defense in areas like SOC automation, threat detection, vulnerability assessment, and incident response and build experience with what works in their specific environments.
“Security teams should experiment with applying AI for defense”
Hmm. But who sells this kind of AI they’re talking about here ?
At the end of the day, this shit is a pathetic excuse of a report and should not be taken as anything else than a shameless attempt at selling more of their product. This is shameful and extremely unprofessional, at best. This disregard for basics ethics in order to sell just a little bit more make me want to never use their product, ever.
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Read the original on djnn.sh »
Just a few months ago we released Nano Banana, our Gemini 2.5 Flash Image model. From restoring old photos to generating mini figurines, Nano Banana was a big step in image editing that empowered casual creators to express their creativity. Today, we’re introducing Nano Banana Pro (Gemini 3 Pro Image), our new state-of-the art image generation and editing model. Built on Gemini 3 Pro, Nano Banana Pro uses Gemini’s state-of-the-art reasoning and real-world knowledge to visualize information better than ever before.
How Nano Banana Pro helps you bring any idea or design to lifeNano Banana Pro can help you visualize any idea and design anything - from prototypes, to representing data as infographics, to turning handwritten notes into diagrams.With Nano Banana Pro, now you can:Generate more accurate, context-rich visuals based on enhanced reasoning, world knowledge and real-time informationWith Gemini 3’s advanced reasoning, Nano Banana Pro doesn’t just create beautiful images, it also helps you create more helpful content. You can get accurate educational explainers to learn more about a new subject, like context-rich infographics and diagrams based on the content you provide or facts from the real world. Nano Banana Pro can also connect to Google Search’s vast knowledge base to help you create a quick snapshot for a recipe or visualize real-time information like weather or sports.
An infographic of the common house plant, String of Turtles, with information on origins, care essentials and growth patterns.Prompt: Create an infographic about this plant focusing on interesting information.
Step-by-step infographic for making Elaichi Chai (cardamom tea), demonstrating the ability to visualize recipes and real-world information.Prompt: Create an infographic that shows how to make elaichi chai
We used Nano Banana Pro to pull in real-time weather via Search grounding to build a pop-art infographic.
Generate better visuals with more accurate, legible text directly in the image in multiple languagesNano Banana Pro is the best model for creating images with correctly rendered and legible text directly in the image, whether you’re looking for a short tagline, or a long paragraph. Gemini 3 is great at understanding depth and nuance, which unlocks a world of possibilities with image editing and generation - especially with text. Now you can create more detailed text in mockups or posters with a wider variety of textures, fonts and calligraphy. With Gemini’s enhanced multilingual reasoning, you can generate text in multiple languages, or localize and translate your content so you can scale internationally and/or share content more easily with friends and family.
A black and white storyboard sketch showing an establishing shot, medium shot, close-up, and POV shot for a film scene.
The word ‘BERLIN’ integrated into the architecture of a city block, spanning across multiple buildings.Prompt: View of a cozy street in Berlin on a bright sunny day, stark shadows. the old houses are oddly shaped like letters that spell out “BERLIN” Colored in Blue, Red, White and black. The houses still look like houses and the resemblance to letters is subtle.
Calligraphy inspired by meaning, showcasing the ability to generate expressive text with a wider variety of textures and fonts.Prompt: make 8 minimalistic logos, each is an expressive word, and make letters convey a message or sound visually to express the meaning of this word in a dramatic way. composition: flat vector rendering of all logos in black on a single white background
A beverage campaign concept showcasing accurate translation and rendering of English text into Korean.Prompt: translate all the English text on the three yellow and blue cans into Korean, while keeping everything else the same
Prompt: A vibrant, eye-catching “TYPOGRAPHY” design on a textured off-white background. The letters are bold, blocky, extra condensed and create a 3D effect with overlapping layers of bright blue and hot pink, each with a halftone dot pattern, evoking a retro print aesthetic. 16:9 aspect ratio
Blending text and texture in a creative way by integrating the phrase into a woodchopping scene.Prompt: Create an image showing the phrase “How much wood would a woodchuck chuck if a woodchuck could chuck wood” made out of wood chucked by a woodchuck.
Consistency by design: With Nano Banana Pro, you can blend more elements than ever before, using up to 14 images and maintaining the consistency and resemblance of up to 5 people. Whether turning sketches into products or blueprints into photorealistic 3D structures, you can now bridge the gap between concept and creation. Apply your desired visual look and feel to your mockups with ease, ensuring your branding remains seamless and consistent across every touchpoint.
Maintaining the consistency of up to 14 inputs, including multiple characters, across a complex composition.Prompt: A medium shot of the 14 fluffy characters sitting squeezed together side-by-side on a worn beige fabric sofa and on the floor. They are all facing forwards, watching a vintage, wooden-boxed television set placed on a low wooden table in front of the sofa. The room is dimly lit, with warm light from a window on the left and the glow from the TV illuminating the creatures’ faces and fluffy textures. The background is a cozy, slightly cluttered living room with a braided rug, a bookshelf with old books, and rustic kitchen elements in the background. The overall atmosphere is warm, cozy, and amused.
Prompt: Combine these images into one appropriately arranged cinematic image in 16:9 format and change the dress on the mannequin to the dress in the image
Prompt: Combine these images into one appropriately arranged cinematic image in 16:9 format
A high-fashion editorial shot set in a desert landscape that maintains the consistency and resemblance of the people from the 6 input photos.Prompt: Put these five people and this dog into a single image, they should fit into a stunning award-winning shot in the style if [sic] a fashion editorial. The identity of all five people and their attire and the dog must stay consistent throughout but they can and should be seen from different angles and distances in [sic] as is most natural and suitable to the scene. Make the colour and lighting look natural on them all, they look like they naturally fit into this fashion show.
Studio-quality creative controls: With Nano Banana Pro’s new capabilities we are putting advanced creative controls directly into your hands. Select, refine and transform any part of an image with improved localized editing. Adjust camera angles, change the focus and apply sophisticated color grading, or even transform scene lighting (e.g. changing day to night or creating a bokeh effect). Your creations are ready for any platform, from social media to print, thanks to a range of available aspect ratios and available 2K and 4K resolution
Change the look and feel of an image for a range of platforms by adapting the aspect ratio.Prompt: change aspect ratio to 1:1 by reducing background. The character, remains exactly locked in its current position
Lighting and focus controls applied to transform a scene from day to night.
Obscure or enlighten a section of your image with lighting controls to achieve specific dramatic effects.
Prompt: Generate an image with an intense chiaroscuro effect. The man should retain his original features and expression. Introduce harsh, directional light, appearing to come from above and slightly to the left, casting deep, defined shadows across the face. Only slivers of light illuminating his eyes and cheekbones, the rest of the face is in deep shadow.
Bring out the details of your composition by adjusting the depth of field or focal point (e.g., focusing on the flowers).
How you can try Nano Banana Pro todayAcross our products and services, you now have a choice: the original Nano Banana for fast, fun editing, or Nano Banana Pro for complex compositions requiring the highest quality and visually sophisticated results.Consumers and students: Rolling out globally in the Gemini app when you select ‘Create images’ with the ‘Thinking’ model. Our free-tier users will receive limited free quotas, after which they will revert to the original Nano Banana model. Google AI Plus, Pro and Ultra subscribers receive higher quotas. For AI Mode in Search, Nano Banana Pro is available in the U.S. for Google AI Pro and Ultra subscribers. For NotebookLM, Nano Banana Pro is also available for subscribers globally.Professionals: We’re upgrading image generation in Google Ads to Nano Banana Pro to put cutting-edge creative and editing power directly into the hands of advertisers globally. It’s also rolling out starting today to Workspace customers in Google Slides and Vids.Developers and enterprise: Starting to roll out in the Gemini API and Google AI Studio, and in Google Antigravity to create rich UX layouts & mockups; enterprises can start building in Vertex AI for scaled creation today and it’s coming soon to Gemini Enterprise.Creatives: Starting to roll out to Google AI Ultra subscribers in Flow, our AI filmmaking tool, to give creatives, filmmakers and marketers even more precision and control over their frames and scenes.
How to identify AI-generated images in the Gemini appWe believe it’s critical to know when an image is AI-generated. This is why all media generated by Google’s tools are embedded with our imperceptible SynthID digital watermark.Today, we are putting a powerful verification tool directly in consumers’ hands: you can now upload an image into the Gemini app and simply ask if it was generated by Google AI, thanks to SynthID technology. We are starting with images, but will expand to audio and video soon.
In addition to SynthID, we will maintain a visible watermark (the Gemini sparkle) on images generated by free and Google AI Pro tier users, to make images even more easy to detect as Google AI-generated.Recognizing the need for a clean visual canvas for professional work, we will remove the visible watermark from images generated by Google AI Ultra subscribers and within the Google AI Studio developer tool.You can find out more about how we’re increasing transparency in AI content with SynthID in our blog post.
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Game developer Rebecca Heineman has died after being diagnosed with cancer last month. The news was shared to Bluesky by Heineman’s friend, Heidi McDonald, while the most recent post on Heineman’s GoFundMe is a goodbye message stating that her health was rapidly deteriorating, and she was entering palliative care. Heineman was 62, and the GoFundMe will remain live to help her family make final arrangements.
Born in 1963, Heineman initially made a mark on the industry by winning a national Space Invaders tournament in 1980 in New York, becoming the first formally recognized US champion of any videogame. She went on to have a far-reaching career, being credited on 67 games according to MobyGames.
Heineman co-founded Interplay in 1983 alongside Brian Fargo, Jay Patel, and Troy Worrell. The developer and publisher was the source of many foundational PC games, including Wasteland, Fallout, and Baldur’s Gate. Heineman designed and programmed a number of games at Interplay, with her most prominent design credit being The Bard’s Tale 3: Thief of Fate.
Heineman’s friend and colleague from Interplay, Brian Fargo, shared a remembrance of the developer on X. “Rebecca Heineman sadly passed away,” Fargo wrote. “Known her since the 80s when I’d drive her to work, one of the most brilliant programmers around. A real gut punch earlier today when she messaged me: ‘We have gone on so many adventures together! But, into the great unknown! I go first!!!’”
Later, in the ’90s and 2000s, Heineman made a name primarily as a programmer, particularly on ports like the Macintosh versions of Wolfenstein 3D, Baldur’s Gate, and Icewind Dale. The saga of Heineman overcoming a deranged businessman to solo program the ill-fated 3DO port of Doom in mere weeks has become a bit of an internet legend: Here’s Digital Foundry and Heineman herself recounting the tale.
Heineman publicly came out as transgender in the 2000s, and was married to fellow games industry legend Jennell Jaquays. Heineman was the recipient of Gayming’s 2025 Gayming Icon award, with the site writing that “her advocacy for LGBTQ+ inclusion, accessibility, and diversity in tech has inspired countless developers and players.”
Jaquays died of complications from Guillain–Barré syndrome in January 2024, and Heineman was blindsided last month by an aggressive cancer diagnosis. She turned to GoFundMe to help with the costs of treatment, where fans, friends, and industry peers showed up to support the developer.
Heineman shared the message last night that her health was rapidly declining.
“It’s time. According to my doctors. All further treatments are pointless,” Heineman wrote. “So, please donate so my kids can create a funeral worthy of my keyboard, Pixelbreaker! So I can make a worthy entrance for reuniting with my one true love, Jennell Jaquays.”
Game developers have begun sharing their own condolences and remembrances in the wake of Heineman’s death.
Rebecca was one of the founders of Interplay and programmed & designed for some of the most influential games of my youth, notably Bard’s Tale I & III and Wasteland. She will be missed.— @jesawyer.bsky.social (@jesawyer.bsky.social.bsky.social) 2025-11-18T00:17:03.191Z
What a remarkable human, and what a remarkable thing to know that she passed bemused at reading her own eulogies. Rest in peace, Rebecca. Thank you for everything.— @ramiismail.com (@ramiismail.com.bsky.social) 2025-11-18T00:15:53.662Z
Rebecca was in my life because she reached out to me, a stranger, because she’d caught wind of a layoff I was impacted by. Her achievements were great, and so too was her kindness.— @jyoungman.bsky.social (@jyoungman.bsky.social.bsky.social) 2025-11-18T00:15:53.699Z
Rest well, you legend, you pioneer, you wonderful soul. I’m lucky to have known you, though briefly. Please share her legacy by reposting Heidi’s message. 💖— @caseymongillo.bsky.social (@caseymongillo.bsky.social.bsky.social) 2025-11-18T00:15:53.712Z
in the early 2000s Rebecca took the time to chat over IRC with a teenaged and gender-confused Me on the practicalities of transition - in a time where being out as trans online was something that could get you socially ostracized. I owe her a lot for that and only hope I can pay it forward.— @moomanibe.bsky.social (@moomanibe.bsky.social.bsky.social) 2025-11-18T00:15:53.675Z
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