Hackers use fake Termius app to infect macOS devices

Hackers are bundling legitimate Mac apps with ZuRu malware and poisoning search results to lure users into downloading trojanized versions. Security firm SentinelOne reported that the Termius SSH client was recently compromised and distributed through malicious domains and fake downloads.

The ZuRu backdoor, originally detected in 2021, allows attackers to silently access infected machines and execute remote commands undetected. Attackers continue to target developers and IT professionals by trojanising trusted tools such as SecureCRT, Navicat, and Microsoft Remote Desktop.

Infected disk image files are slightly larger than legitimate ones due to embedded malicious binaries. Victims unknowingly launch malware alongside the real app.

The malware bypasses macOS code-signing protections by injecting a temporary developer signature into the compromised application bundle. The updated variant of ZuRu requires macOS Sonoma 14.1 or newer and supports advanced command-and-control functions using the open-source Khepri beacon.

The functions include file transfers, command execution, system reconnaissance and process control, with captured outputs sent back to attacker-controlled domains. The latest campaign used termius.fun and termius.info to host the trojanized packages. Affected users often lack proper endpoint security.

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Bank of Korea sounds alarm over unregulated stablecoins

Bank of Korea Governor Lee Chang-yong warned that letting non-banks issue won-based stablecoins could spark economic confusion similar to the 19th-century US Free Banking Era. His remarks follow President Lee Jae Myung’s push to launch domestic stablecoins under his economic agenda.

Governor Lee noted that handing over payment and settlement services to non-banks might disrupt the profit models of traditional banks and conflict with foreign exchange policies. He stressed that stablecoin policy requires coordination across government, as the central bank lacks sole authority.

Meanwhile, President Lee’s support for stablecoins has sparked a flurry of activity among fintech and banking firms, with many filing trademark applications linked to KRW stablecoin symbols. KakaoPay, one of South Korea’s largest payment platforms, has seen its stock surge by more than 120% since Lee’s election.

The BOK recently announced it will pause its central bank digital currency (CBDC) pilot, citing legal uncertainty surrounding the coexistence of CBDCs, stablecoins, and deposit tokens. Lee stated the trial had considered stablecoin interaction from the beginning, and further action will depend on legislative developments.

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Huawei challenges Nvidia in global AI chip market

Huawei Technologies is exploring AI chip exports to the Middle East and Southeast Asia in a bid to compete with Nvidia, according to a Bloomberg News report published Thursday.

The Chinese telecom firm has contacted potential buyers in the United Arab Emirates, Saudi Arabia, and Thailand to promote its Ascend 910B chips, an earlier-generation AI processor.

The offer involves a limited number of chips, reportedly in the low thousands, although specific quantities remain undisclosed. No deals have been finalised so far. Sources cited in the report said there is limited interest in the UAE, and the status of talks in Thailand remains uncertain.

Government representatives in Thailand and Saudi Arabia did not immediately respond to Reuters’ requests for comment. Huawei also declined to comment. The initiative is part of a broader strategy to expand into markets where US chipmakers have long held dominance.

Huawei also promotes remote access to CloudMatrix 384, a China-based AI system built using its more advanced chipsets. However, due to supply limitations, the company cannot export these high-end models outside China.

The Middle East has quickly become a high-demand region for AI infrastructure, attracting interest from leading technology companies. Nvidia has already struck several regional deals, positioning itself as a major player in AI development across Saudi Arabia and neighbouring countries.

Huawei is simultaneously focusing on domestic sales of its newer 910C chips, offering them to Chinese firms that cannot purchase US AI chips due to ongoing export restrictions imposed by Washington.

US administrations have long cited national security concerns in limiting China’s access to cutting-edge chip technologies, fearing their potential use in military applications.

‘With the current export controls, we are effectively out of the China datacenter market, which is now served only by competitors such as Huawei,’ an Nvidia spokesperson told Reuters.

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New Gemini AI tool animates photos into short video clips

Google has rolled out a new feature for Gemini AI that transforms still photos into short, animated eight-second videos with sound. The capability is powered by Veo 3, Google’s latest video generation model, and is currently available to Gemini Advanced Ultra and Pro subscribers.

The tool supports background noise, ambient audio, and even spoken dialogue, with support gradually expanding to users in select countries, including India. At launch, access to the web interface is limited, though Google has announced that mobile support will follow later in the week.

To use the tool, users upload a photo, describe the intended motion, and optionally add prompts for sound effects or narration. Gemini then generates a 720p MP4 video in a 16:9 landscape format, automatically synchronising visuals and audio.

Josh Woodward, Vice President of the Gemini app and Google Labs, showcased the feature on X (formerly Twitter), animating a child’s drawing. ‘Still experimental, but we wanted our Pro and Ultra members to try it first,’ he said, calling the result fun and expressive.

To maintain authenticity, each video includes a visible ‘Veo’ watermark in the bottom-right corner and an invisible SynthID watermark. This hidden digital signature, developed by Google DeepMind, helps identify AI-generated content and preserve transparency around synthetic media.

The company has emphasised its commitment to responsible AI deployment by embedding traceable markers in all output from this tool. These safeguards come amid increasing scrutiny of generative video tools and deepfakes across digital platforms.

To animate a photo using Gemini AI’s new tool, users should follow these steps: Click on the ‘tools’ icon in the prompt bar, then choose the ‘video’ option from the menu. Upload the still image, describe the desired motion, and provide sound or narration instructions, optionally.

The underlying Veo 3 model was first introduced at Google I/O as the company’s most advanced video generation engine. It can produce high-quality visuals, simulate real-world physics, and even lip-sync dialogue from text and image-based prompts.

A Google blog post explains: ‘Veo 3 excels from text and image prompting to real-world physics and accurate lip syncing.’ The company says users can craft short story prompts and expect realistic, cinematic responses from the model.

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Report shows China outpacing the US and EU in AI research

AI is increasingly viewed as a strategic asset rather than a technological development, and new research suggests China is now leading the global AI race.

A report titled ‘DeepSeek and the New Geopolitics of AI: China’s ascent to research pre-eminence in AI’, authored by Daniel Hook, CEO of Digital Science, highlights how China’s AI research output has grown to surpass that of the US, the EU and the UK combined.

According to data from Dimensions, a primary global research database, China now accounts for over 40% of worldwide citation attention in AI-related studies. Instead of focusing solely on academic output, the report points to China’s dominance in AI-related patents.

In some indicators, China is outpacing the US tenfold in patent filings and company-affiliated research, signalling its capacity to convert academic work into tangible innovation.

Hook’s analysis covers AI research trends from 2000 to 2024, showing global AI publication volumes rising from just under 10,000 papers in 2000 to 60,000 in 2024.

However, China’s influence has steadily expanded since 2018, while the EU and the US have seen relative declines. The UK has largely maintained its position.

Clarivate, another analytics firm, reported similar findings, noting nearly 900,000 AI research papers produced in China in 2024, triple the figure from 2015.

Hook notes that governments increasingly view AI alongside energy or military power as a matter of national security. Instead of treating AI as a neutral technology, there is growing awareness that a lack of AI capability could have serious economic, political and social consequences.

The report suggests that understanding AI’s geopolitical implications has become essential for national policy.

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Grok chatbot relies on Musk’s views instead of staying neutral

Grok, the AI chatbot owned by Elon Musk’s company xAI, appears to search for Musk’s personal views before answering sensitive or divisive questions.

Rather than relying solely on a balanced range of sources, Grok has been seen citing Musk’s opinions when responding to topics like Israel and Palestine, abortion, and US immigration.

Evidence gathered from a screen recording by data scientist Jeremy Howard shows Grok actively ‘considering Elon Musk’s views’ in its reasoning process. Out of 64 citations Grok provided about Israel and Palestine, 54 were linked to Musk.

Others confirmed similar results when asking about abortion and immigration laws, suggesting a pattern.

While the behaviour might seem deliberate, some experts believe it happens naturally instead of through intentional programming. Programmer Simon Willison noted that Grok’s system prompt tells it to avoid media bias and search for opinions from all sides.

Yet, Grok may prioritise Musk’s stance because it ‘knows’ its owner, especially when addressing controversial matters.

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AI technology drives sharp rise in synthetic abuse material

AI is increasingly being used to produce highly realistic synthetic abuse videos, raising alarm among regulators and industry bodies.

According to new data published by the Internet Watch Foundation (IWF), 1,286 individual AI-generated abuse videos were identified during the first half of 2025, compared to just two in the same period last year.

Instead of remaining crude or glitch-filled, such material now appears so lifelike that under UK law, it must be treated like authentic recordings.

More than 1,000 of the videos fell into Category A, the most serious classification involving depictions of extreme harm. The number of webpages hosting this type of content has also risen sharply.

Derek Ray-Hill, interim chief executive of the IWF, expressed concern that longer-form synthetic abuse films are now inevitable unless binding safeguards around AI development are introduced.

Safeguarding minister Jess Phillips described the figures as ‘utterly horrific’ and confirmed two new laws are being introduced to address both those creating this material and those providing tools or guidance on how to do so.

IWF analysts say video quality has advanced significantly instead of remaining basic or easy to detect. What once involved clumsy manipulation is now alarmingly convincing, complicating efforts to monitor and remove such content.

The IWF encourages the public to report concerning material and share the exact web page where it is located.

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Space operators face strict cybersecurity obligations under EU plan

The European Commission has unveiled a new draft law introducing cybersecurity requirements for space infrastructure, aiming to protect ground and orbital systems.

Operators must implement rigorous cyber risk management measures, including supply chain oversight, encryption, access control and incident response systems. A notable provision places direct accountability on company boards, which could be held personally liable for failures to comply.

The proposed law builds on existing EU regulations such as NIS 2 and DORA, with additional tailored obligations for the space domain. Non-EU firms will also fall within scope unless their home jurisdictions are recognised as offering equivalent regulatory protections.

Fines of up to 2% of global revenue are foreseen, with member states and the EU’s space agency EUSPA granted inspection and enforcement powers. Industry stakeholders are encouraged to engage with the legislative process and align existing cybersecurity frameworks with the Act’s provisions.

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Microsoft and Salesforce use AI to cut costs and reshape workforce

Microsoft is reporting substantial productivity improvements across its operations, thanks to the growing integration of AI tools in daily workflows.

Judson Althoff, the company’s chief commercial officer, stated during a recent presentation that AI contributed to savings of over $500 million in Microsoft’s call centres last year alone.

The technology has reportedly improved employee and customer satisfaction while supporting operations in sales, customer service, and software engineering. Microsoft is also now using AI to handle interactions with smaller clients, streamlining engagement without significantly expanding headcount.

The developments follow Microsoft’s decision to lay off over 9,000 employees last week, marking the third round of cuts in 2024 and bringing the total to around 15,000.

Although it remains unclear whether automation directly replaced job losses, CEO Satya Nadella has previously stated that AI now generates 20 to 30 percent of the code in Microsoft repositories.

Similar shifts occur at Salesforce, where CEO Marc Benioff has openly acknowledged AI’s growing role in company operations and resource planning.

During a recent analyst call, Robin Washington, Salesforce’s CFO and COO confirmed that hiring has slowed, and 500 customer service roles have been reassigned internally.

The adjustment is expected to result in cost savings of $50 million, as the company focuses on optimising operations through digital transformation. Benioff also disclosed that AI performs between 30 and 50 percent of work previously handled by staff, contributing to workforce realignment.

Companies across the tech sector are rapidly adopting AI to improve efficiency, even as the broader implications for employment and labour markets continue to emerge.

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Germany’s top banks move into crypto with regulated services

Some of Germany’s largest banks are set to enter the crypto market with fully regulated custody and trading services.

Deutsche Bank, Sparkassen-Finanzgruppe, and Volksbanken Raiffeisenbanken are building platforms aimed at institutional and retail clients, signalling a significant shift for conservative institutions.

These developments follow the EU’s Markets in Crypto‑Assets Regulation (MiCA), which took effect in 2025 and provides clear legal frameworks across Europe.

Deutsche Bank is developing an institutional crypto custody service with Bitpanda and Taurus compliant with BaFin and MiCA regulations. Meanwhile, Sparkassen-Finanzgruppe plans to embed retail crypto trading within its Sparkasse app, reaching nearly 50 million users by mid-2026.

Volksbanken Raiffeisenbanken are piloting compliant trading and custody services through collaborations with Börse Stuttgart Digital and Atruvia.

Deutsche Bank is also developing Project DAMA 2, an Ethereum layer-2 solution for tokenising assets and future bank-issued stablecoins. As major banks adopt crypto, Germany could lead an EU-wide shift to regulated digital assets, ending crypto’s unregulated early phase.

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