Nancy Guthrie, mother of Today host Savannah Guthrie, has been missing for over a month now. While the investigation remains active, with no new breaks over the past several weeks, the Pima County Sheriff’s Department in Arizona has returned some of its police officers back to their previous positions. The media circus outside of Nancy’s house left with them.
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Nancy Guthrie missing case: The influencer circus on TikTok and YouTube.
That isn’t the case for everybody, however. There are social media influencers still milling around the missing Guthrie’s home, waiting for a break in the case. And they’re not just waiting — but trying to actually solve the case. They’re looking for clues while their followers give their own theories that can verge into outrageous.
Slate’s Luke Winkie told Today, Explained co-host Sean Rameswaram that he “thinks people think that this case could be solved despite the fact that it’s not, and that has driven a lot of the speculation.”
Below is an excerpt of Winkie’s conversation with Today, Explained, edited for length and clarity. There’s much more in the full episode, so listen to Today, Explained wherever you get podcasts, including Apple Podcasts, Pandora, and Spotify.
Tell us where you went and tell us what it looked like.
I flew into Phoenix, Arizona, jumped in a rental car, took out my phone, and I tapped in Nancy Guthrie’s address. I drove to Tucson, about an hour and a half away, all pretty ordinary. And then I took this one right turn onto a street, and immediately, there were all these cars parked on the side of the road. There were drones overhead — media people just kind of wandering around. There’s people filming front-facing camera videos and talking to their streaming setups. There’s not a police barricade or anything. Anyone can just show up there to cover the case.
Is there something about this Nancy Guthrie case that is particularly potent for these true crime tribes? Is it just that her daughter’s super famous?
This is a galactically famous person, almost like in the subconscious of America. And we live in kind of a low trust culture right now, and I think people are maybe more eager to believe that maybe the sheriff doesn’t know what they’re talking about. Maybe the FBI has bungled this. So maybe you’re more inclined to think that a couple YouTubers might be getting to the bottom of something or are focusing on something that authorities out there have missed.
Did you get a sense being out there how much people wanted to solve this case versus how much they just wanted it to drag on for the views?
I can’t say that the influencers wanted it to drag on for the engagement, but I do think that the longer it went on, in some ways that was more validating for some of the influencers, in the sense that it let them kind of exist within this narrative, that I’m the one that’s going to be able to solve this. I remember there was this one guy, Jonathan Lee Riches, JLR, he goes by, and the longer I was out there, his content stopped being so much about Nancy Guthrie and started being about [the authorities]: “I understand people have to have health and fitness, but would you go — like if you’re the sheriff — would you go to the gym and work out, just like, the next day when Nancy goes missing? He’s been there for days, like working out in the morning.”
What’s funny about that is here we are a month and a couple of days out from Nancy Guthrie being abducted, and none of them have figured it out! What are the influencers doing out there?
“The top guy out there, JLR, was getting almost 80,000 concurrent views of people just staring at a static [shot] of Nancy Guthrie’s house.”
Most influencers are literally just setting up a camera in front of her house and talking to a chat box that is filled with people that are tuning in to basically stare at Nancy Guthrie’s house and wait for updates to trickle in, or to share random theories they saw on Twitter, or to pass along rumors.
And you might think, why would anyone tune into that? [But] clearly there is a market for this. The top guy out there, JLR, was getting almost 80,000 concurrent views of people just staring at a static [shot] of Nancy Guthrie’s house. I talked to another guy out there who’s from California; he drove out there and his reasoning [was]: No one was taking the night shift.
How different is that, I guess, from CNN being out there and not breaking any new news?
This is the thing I found myself thinking about a lot, because you are right. The engagement [from the audience] is really good; you were covering the biggest story in the world, and if you are in the game of true crime, this is where you want to be. You have kind of the veneer of giving the people what they want. I’m out here covering this story and piping it to the people that trust me on true crime.
I didn’t get a great sense that ultimately what these influencers were doing and what these cable news entities were doing were especially different. I think at the end of the day, everyone was sort of milling around Nancy Guthrie’s house waiting for the sheriff to show up to make their statements.
You could say they’re not hurting anyone, but they kind of are — because haven’t they gassed up certain theories to the detriment of alleged suspects who weren’t even suspects?
A good example is the sheriff, when I was out there, made a statement kind of reiterating that they had ruled out Nancy Guthrie’s immediate family as suspects in this investigation. And that’s because there’s been all this speculation that someone close to Nancy Guthrie might’ve been the person to abduct her.
And I talked to one guy out there who was a true crime streamer, and he told me, “Well, I go about things a different way. I like to have direct interaction with my viewers. So when the sheriff put out that statement, I put a poll in my chat saying like, Hey, do you believe the sheriff that her family had nothing to do with it? And in that poll everyone said that, No, I think their family still had something to do with it.”
It wasn’t like he was taking charge of saying, No, guys, listen, we can’t be talking about that, because the authorities ruled them out. They were still willing to kind of engage in that kind of speculation, which you could say is a little bit damaging and not necessarily helpful to solving the case.
It’s like doing your own research about vaccines, except you could ruin someone’s life, right?
I was talking to this guy who was an influencer, and we were talking about how streamers like him get accused of passing along misinformation. He had starred in an Inside Edition feature about how he and these other influencers were putting out these rumors, and how the police want them gone. I expected him to push back hard against the idea that he was spreading misinformation. And he did that a little bit, but that wasn’t really the thrust of his defense.
Instead, he told me that, Listen, I’m going to get things wrong. But I’m a true crime content creator, and that’s what makes true crime fun. To come up with a rumor and a theory and talk about that and explore it, and maybe it later [gets] debunked — that is kind of what we do here in true crime. The next day he was going to go investigate a golf course, because some of his viewers thought that Nancy Guthrie’s body might be stowed away in this golf course. I was chilled about how much I related to what he was saying, and how icky it felt, nonetheless.
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New leash on life: Why this Tableau vet walked away from tech to roll with the dogs

It’s tough to tell who has the bigger smile: the guy zipping by on the Onewheel, the dog running alongside him at full sprint, or the passersby lucky enough to witness it.
This is Eric Howard‘s dream job.
Howard is the founder and chief dog runner at Dog Tired, a dog-exercising service outside of Seattle that operates at a different speed. After stints in tech, including at data visualization company Tableau, Howard ditched the corporate leash for one he actually wanted to hold.
“I show up and I’m like the Beatles, and they’re like a teenage girl. They’re just excited to see me,” Howard said of his four-legged clients. “It’s hard to have a bad day when you go see eight dogs and they’re all just losing their mind, happy to see you.”
A longtime adventure seeker, Howard is a snowboarder and kiteboarder who fell in love the first time he stepped on a Onewheel — the self-balancing, single-wheeled electric board that riders control by shifting their weight.
He’s also a dog lover. When a relationship in Portland ended and the dog he’d shared with his girlfriend stayed behind, he got another one — a 15-pound poodle mix named Riley — and soon realized he was cut out for some sort of job in the pet industry.
The concept for Dog Tired came together when a friend had a high-energy rat terrier that was, in Howard’s words, bouncing off the walls. Howard tried running the dog alongside his Onewheel and it quickly became a daily — sometimes twice daily — ritual.
His friend noticed the difference immediately. The dog was more manageable and happy. And Howard saw an opportunity.
A nudge from dad
Howard graduated from the University of Washington with a degree in informatics at age 31 — a non-traditional path that he describes as a theme in his life. He joined Tableau as a senior tech support engineer when the company was still in what he considered a startup phase — long before it was acquired for $15.7 billion by San Francisco-based Salesforce in 2019.
He spent nearly five years across two separate stretches at Tableau, which he called the best employer he’s ever had. But as the startup atmosphere began to fade he lost his passion for data analysis, server engineering and managing a team. He needed a change.
“My dad really wanted me to do the Onewheel business. I really credit my dad with giving me that final nudge,” Howard said. “He was like, ‘You’ve got some money in your retirement and some money in savings. How long could you survive without making any money?’”
Howard figured he could make it six months or so.
“As soon as I started reaching out, spreading the word, it just caught fire,” he said. “People were just like, ‘This is a genius idea.’”
‘Bottomless demand’
Howard soon had 15 clients and a regular weekly routine. Within six months he was covering his bills. And five years later, Dog Tired has grown into a full-fledged operation. Howard does 50 runs a week and a part-time employee handles another dozen or more.
“I’ve got about 5,000 dog runs under my belt, about 17,000 miles total,” he said, adding that the business largely sells itself, with little turnover. “There’s a bottomless demand out there of dogs that are just waiting to get the exercise they need.”
Howard has a 100-pound-dog limit and he sticks to low-traffic areas. It helps him stay in control on the Onewheel when his clients want to chase squirrels or rabbits.
He said the work is really about relationship management, which is a lot of what he learned at Tableau. There’s plenty of troubleshooting, but in this case it’s dogs rather than computers.
“I’m not rich. I don’t make a fortune, but I feel very rich,” Howard said. “I look forward to every day. I get up early in the morning and the day can’t get started fast enough for me.”
Tech
Save $150 on Apple's new M5 MacBook Air during Amazon's April sale
The lowest price ever is in effect now on Apple’s M5 MacBook Air, with a weekend deal at Amazon slashing prices by $150 (and there are numerous 13-inch and 15-inch configurations to choose from).

Grab the lowest price ever on Apple’s new M5 MacBook Air.
Apple’s brand-new M5 MacBook Air, which was released in March 2026, is on sale at Amazon today, with multiple 13-inch and 15-inch configurations to choose from.
Kicking off the sale is a $150 discount on the standard 13-inch MacBook Air with Apple’s M5 chip. Pick up the M5/16GB/512GB configuration for $949.99, the lowest price to date on the Sky Blue and Starlight models.
Continue Reading on AppleInsider | Discuss on our Forums
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Quordle hints and answers for Monday, April 6 (game #1533)
Looking for a different day?
A new Quordle puzzle appears at midnight each day for your time zone – which means that some people are always playing ‘today’s game’ while others are playing ‘yesterday’s’. If you’re looking for Sunday’s puzzle instead then click here: Quordle hints and answers for Sunday, April 5 (game #1532).
Quordle was one of the original Wordle alternatives and is still going strong now more than 1,400 games later. It offers a genuine challenge, though, so read on if you need some Quordle hints today – or scroll down further for the answers.
SPOILER WARNING: Information about Quordle today is below, so don’t read on if you don’t want to know the answers.
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Quordle today (game #1533) – hint #1 – Vowels
How many different vowels are in Quordle today?
• The number of different vowels in Quordle today is 3*.
* Note that by vowel we mean the five standard vowels (A, E, I, O, U), not Y (which is sometimes counted as a vowel too).
Quordle today (game #1533) – hint #2 – repeated letters
Do any of today’s Quordle answers contain repeated letters?
• The number of Quordle answers containing a repeated letter today is 2.
Quordle today (game #1533) – hint #3 – uncommon letters
Do the letters Q, Z, X or J appear in Quordle today?
• No. None of Q, Z, X or J appear among today’s Quordle answers.
Quordle today (game #1533) – hint #4 – starting letters (1)
Do any of today’s Quordle puzzles start with the same letter?
• The number of today’s Quordle answers starting with the same letter is 0.
If you just want to know the answers at this stage, simply scroll down. If you’re not ready yet then here’s one more clue to make things a lot easier:
Quordle today (game #1533) – hint #5 – starting letters (2)
What letters do today’s Quordle answers start with?
• C
• I
• P
• B
Right, the answers are below, so DO NOT SCROLL ANY FURTHER IF YOU DON’T WANT TO SEE THEM.
Quordle today (game #1533) – the answers

The answers to today’s Quordle, game #1533, are…
Today’s game prompted me to think about a British magazine I used to subscribe to called the IDLER, whose slogan is “slow down, have fun, live well”.
It’s a motto worth remembering while playing Quordle, as speed leads to mistakes while a slower game brings the joy of untangling a tricky puzzle such as today’s.
Daily Sequence today (game #1533) – the answers

The answers to today’s Quordle Daily Sequence, game #1533, are…
Quordle answers: The past 20
- Quordle #1532, Sunday, 5 April: PLUSH, GRATE, DEALT, LABEL
- Quordle #1531, Saturday, 4 April: MOTEL, COVEN, DRIER, SCOLD
- Quordle #1530, Friday, 3 April: PINEY, TRUSS, HALVE, SPOOF
- Quordle #1529, Thursday, 2 April: LEAPT, MECCA, TRAIT, REFER
- Quordle #1528, Wednesday, 1 April: SEVEN, PRIOR, ADAGE, AUDIO
- Quordle #1527, Tuesday, 31 March: SMACK, HAPPY, LYING, PULPY
- Quordle #1526, Monday, 30 March: CHESS, ALLOT, SCONE, DITTY
- Quordle #1525, Sunday, 29 March: DELAY, STONY, MONTH, PARTY
- Quordle #1524, Saturday, 28 March: BRAWN, FELLA, SCALY, BRUNT
- Quordle #1523, Friday, 27 March: GROIN, WRONG, SKUNK, SHALL
- Quordle #1522, Thursday, 26 March: HOBBY, COULD, MORPH, LEDGE
- Quordle #1521, Wednesday, 25 March: BLUSH, GRIND, AWASH, SCALP
- Quordle #1520, Tuesday, 24 March: MADAM, BLACK, USING, VOICE
- Quordle #1519, Monday, 23 March: BAGEL, HOARD, AUGUR, TANGY
- Quordle #1518, Sunday, 22 March: SPLAT, BACON, CAIRN, AWFUL
- Quordle #1517, Saturday, 21 March: LEVEL, MAPLE, BRAID, CORAL
- Quordle #1516, Friday, 20 March: BUSED, FRONT, JEWEL, TRIPE
- Quordle #1515, Thursday, 19 March: DIRGE, VERVE, MAKER, FROZE
- Quordle #1514, Wednesday, 18 March: CLIFF, EXPEL, PRIZE, FROCK
- Quordle #1513, Tuesday, 17 March: GREET, BROOD, GRIME, SQUAT
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Hackers Are Posting the Claude Code Leak With Bonus Malware
A WIRED investigation based on Department of Homeland Security records this week revealed the identities of paramilitary Border Patrol agents who frequently used force against civilians during Operation Midway Blitz in Chicago last fall. Several of the agents, WIRED found, appeared in similar operations in other states around the US.
Customs and Border Protection may want to remember to protect its sensitive facility information. Using basic Google searches, WIRED discovered flashcards made by users of the online learning platform Quizlet that contained gate codes to CBP facilities and more.
In a rare move, Apple this week released “backported” patches for iOS 18 to protect millions of people still using the older operating system from the DarkSword hacking technique that was found in use in the wild. Discovered in March, DarkSword allows attackers to infect iPhones that simply visit a website loaded with the takeover tools embedded in it. Apple initially pushed users to update to the current version of its operating system, iOS 26, but ultimately issued the iOS 18 patches after DarkSword continued to spread.
The US-Israel war with Iran careened into its second month this week, with Iran threatening to launch attacks against more than a dozen US companies, including tech giants like Apple, Google, and Microsoft, which have offices and data centers in the Gulf region. The deadly conflict, which has no clear end in sight, continues to wreak havoc on the global economy as shipping crews remain stranded in the Strait of Hormuz, a key trade route. Meanwhile, some are beginning to wonder what could happen if US strikes cause real damage to Iran’s nuclear facilities.
And that’s not all! Each week, we round up the security and privacy news we didn’t cover in depth ourselves. Click the headlines to read the full stories. And stay safe out there.
Earlier this week, a security researcher flagged that Anthropic accidentally made the source code for its popular vibe-coding tool, Claude Code, public. Immediately, people began reposting the code on the developer platform GitHub. But beware if you want to try to download some of those repos yourself: BleepingComputer reports that some of the posters are actually hackers who have tucked a piece of infostealer malware into the lines of code.
Anthropic, for its part, has been trying to remove copies of the leak (malware-ridden or not) by issuing copyright takedown notices. The Wall Street Journal reported that the company initially tried to remove more than 8,000 repositories on GitHub but later narrowed that down to 96 copies and adaptations.
This isn’t the first time that hackers have capitalized on interest in Claude Code, which requires users who might not be as familiar with their computer’s terminal to copy and paste install commands from a website. In March, 404 Media reported that sponsored ads on Google led to sites that were masquerading as official Claude Code installation guides, which directed users to run a command that would actually download malware.
The FBI formally classified a recent cyber intrusion into one of its surveillance collection systems as a “major incident” under FISMA—a legal designation reserved for breaches believed to pose serious risks to national security. The determination, reported to Congress earlier this week, is understood to be the first time since at least 2020 that the bureau has declared a major incident on its own systems. Politico, citing two unnamed senior Trump administration officials, reported that China is believed to be behind the intrusion. If confirmed, the breach could mark a significant counterintelligence failure for the FBI.
The FBI said it detected “suspicious activities” on its networks in February. In a notice to Congress on March 4, reviewed by Politico, the bureau said the compromised systems were unclassified and held “returns from legal process,” citing, as examples, phone and internet metadata collected under court orders and personal information “pertaining to subjects of FBI investigations.” The intruders reportedly gained access through a commercial internet service provider, an approach the FBI characterized as reflecting “sophisticated tactics.” In its only public statement, the bureau said it had deployed “all technical capabilities to respond.”
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NYT Connections hints and answers for Monday, April 6 (game #1030)
Looking for a different day?
A new NYT Connections puzzle appears at midnight each day for your time zone – which means that some people are always playing ‘today’s game’ while others are playing ‘yesterday’s’. If you’re looking for Sunday’s puzzle instead then click here: NYT Connections hints and answers for Sunday, April 5 (game #1029).
Good morning! Let’s play Connections, the NYT’s clever word game that challenges you to group answers in various categories. It can be tough, so read on if you need Connections hints.
SPOILER WARNING: Information about NYT Connections today is below, so don’t read on if you don’t want to know the answers.
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NYT Connections today (game #1030) – today’s words

Today’s NYT Connections words are…
- SHARE
- OLIVES
- MALLET
- HOP
- MOLE
- WICKET
- BALL
- STAKE
- HOLES
- RAVE
- CAROUSER
- CONCERN
- EVITE
- CLAIM
- TIMER
- HOEDOWN
NYT Connections today (game #1030) – hint #1 – group hints
What are some clues for today’s NYT Connections groups?
- YELLOW: Boogie nights
- GREEN: Involved
- BLUE: Fun game where you hit a fake animal
- PURPLE: On Broadway but a bit off
Need more clues?
We’re firmly in spoiler territory now, but read on if you want to know what the four theme answers are for today’s NYT Connections puzzles…
NYT Connections today (game #1030) – hint #2 – group answers
What are the answers for today’s NYT Connections groups?
- YELLOW: EVENTS WITH DANCING
- GREEN: INTEREST
- BLUE: COMPONENTS OF WHAC-A-MOLE
- PURPLE: MUSICALS WITH LAST LETTER CHANGED
Right, the answers are below, so DO NOT SCROLL ANY FURTHER IF YOU DON’T WANT TO SEE THEM.
NYT Connections today (game #1030) – the answers

The answers to today’s Connections, game #1030, are…
- YELLOW: EVENTS WITH DANCING BALL, HOEDOWN, HOP, RAVE
- GREEN: INTEREST CLAIM, CONCERN, SHARE, STAKE
- BLUE: COMPONENTS OF WHAC-A-MOLE HOLES, MALLET, MOLE, TIMER
- PURPLE: MUSICALS WITH LAST LETTER CHANGED CAROUSER, EVITE, OLIVES, WICKET
- My rating: Hard
- My score: 1 mistake
Seeing MALLET and WICKET in today’s grid I convinced myself that we were looking for elements of the niche upper class sport of croquet, which involves both these things and a BALL and quite possibly a STAKE, although I’m not entirely sure.
Anyway, I was wrong — very, very wrong.
Fortunately, this was the end of my mistakes and I landed the other groups of four in difficulty order. Kudos to anyone who spotted the musicals — a genius bit of wordplay from our puzzling overlords.
Yesterday’s NYT Connections answers (Sunday, April 5, game #1029)
- YELLOW: ATOMIC STRUCTURE TERMS ELECTRON, NUCLEUS, ORBIT, SHELL
- GREEN: PARTS OF A SHERLOCK HOLMES COSTUME DEERSTALKER, MAGNIFYING GLASS, PIPE, VIOLIN
- BLUE: THINGS TO FLIP COIN, LIGHT SWITCH, PANCAKE, THE BIRD
- PURPLE: STARTING WITH SYNONYMS FOR “SLUSH” GOOGOL, MUSHROOM, PASTEURIZE, PULPIT
What is NYT Connections?
NYT Connections is one of several increasingly popular word games made by the New York Times. It challenges you to find groups of four items that share something in common, and each group has a different difficulty level: green is easy, yellow a little harder, blue often quite tough and purple usually very difficult.
On the plus side, you don’t technically need to solve the final one, as you’ll be able to answer that one by a process of elimination. What’s more, you can make up to four mistakes, which gives you a little bit of breathing room.
It’s a little more involved than something like Wordle, however, and there are plenty of opportunities for the game to trip you up with tricks. For instance, watch out for homophones and other word games that could disguise the answers.
It’s playable for free via the NYT Games site on desktop or mobile.
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NYT Strands hints and answers for Monday, April 6 (game #764)
Looking for a different day?
A new NYT Strands puzzle appears at midnight each day for your time zone – which means that some people are always playing ‘today’s game’ while others are playing ‘yesterday’s’. If you’re looking for Sunday’s puzzle instead then click here: NYT Strands hints and answers for Sunday, April 5 (game #763).
Strands is the NYT’s latest word game after the likes of Wordle, Spelling Bee and Connections – and it’s great fun. It can be difficult, though, so read on for my Strands hints.
SPOILER WARNING: Information about NYT Strands today is below, so don’t read on if you don’t want to know the answers.
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NYT Strands today (game #764) – hint #1 – today’s theme
What is the theme of today’s NYT Strands?
• Today’s NYT Strands theme is… Fringe group
NYT Strands today (game #764) – hint #2 – clue words
Play any of these words to unlock the in-game hints system.
- DARK
- GRADE
- MEET
- TRIM
- RING
- TEXT
NYT Strands today (game #764) – hint #3 – spangram letters
How many letters are in today’s spangram?
• Spangram has 11 letters
NYT Strands today (game #764) – hint #4 – spangram position
What are two sides of the board that today’s spangram touches?
First side: left, 6th row
Last side: right, 5th row
Right, the answers are below, so DO NOT SCROLL ANY FURTHER IF YOU DON’T WANT TO SEE THEM.
NYT Strands today (game #764) – the answers

The answers to today’s Strands, game #764, are…
- EDGE
- EXTREMITY
- BRINK
- VERGE
- MARGIN
- BOUNDARY
- SPANGRAM: OUTERLIMITS
- My rating: Hard
- My score: 1 hint
Thinking the “fringe group” was some kind of hair-based pun, I was certain that “trim” would be my first word.
Instead, after getting EDGE following a hint, I soon discovered that the theme was referring to the OUTERLIMITS (also the name of a great 1990s sci-fi series, by the way) of things.
It is so strange with Strands that a little kickstart is all you need to see all the rest of the words you are looking for, a feeling that simultaneously makes you feel smart for seeing them all amid the letter soup and dumb for not spotting them originally.
Yesterday’s NYT Strands answers (Sunday, April 5, game #763)
- KANGAROO
- BILBY
- KOALA
- WOMBAT
- OPOSSUM
- SPANGRAM: MARSUPIALS
What is NYT Strands?
Strands is the NYT’s not-so-new-any-more word game, following Wordle and Connections. It’s now a fully fledged member of the NYT’s games stable that has been running for a year and which can be played on the NYT Games site on desktop or mobile.
I’ve got a full guide to how to play NYT Strands, complete with tips for solving it, so check that out if you’re struggling to beat it each day.
Tech
Sony quietly removes PC mentions from PlayStation Studios pages
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On PlayStation Studios’ official site, Sony has updated the main banner to prominently feature Ghost of Yotei and Intergalactic: The Heretic Prophet, while Demon’s Souls Remake no longer appears in the lineup.
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The Hack That Exposed Syria’s Sweeping Security Failures
When a wave of unusual activity swept through Syrian government accounts on X in March, it first looked like pure chaos—trolling, parody names, and even explicit content. But beneath the noise lay something far more telling: a state still struggling with the most basic layer of its cybersecurity.
In early March, several official Syrian government accounts on X—including those linked to the presidency’s General Secretariat, the Central Bank, and multiple ministries—were hacked. The compromised profiles posted “Glory to Israel,” retweeted explicit material, and briefly renamed themselves after Israeli leaders.
Authorities moved to restore control within days, with the Ministry of Communications and Information Technology announcing “urgent steps” to recover the accounts and prevent further breaches. Yet what remained unsettled was the deeper question: How secure is the state’s digital front door?
In a government now dependent on commercial platforms for communication, losing a verified account doesn’t just disrupt messaging—it silences the state’s voice.
When the State Stops Speaking for Itself
At first glance, the breach appeared politically charged. Pro‑Israel messages circulating on verified government accounts during a tense regional moment fueled speculation over motive and attribution. No group claimed responsibility, and officials did not clarify whether internal systems were compromised.
To analysts, the episode pointed less to a geopolitically driven hack and more to a familiar, systemic weakness.
“We still do not know exactly what happened. Whether the accounts were directly hacked or accessed through weak or reused credentials, the conclusion is much the same: very poor digital security practices,” says Noura Aljizawi, a senior researcher at the Citizen Lab, a research organization that monitors threats to civil society in the digital age.
The ministry said it had coordinated with account administrators and X to “restore control and strengthen security,” promising new regulatory measures soon. The perpetrators have not been publicly identified.
One Weak Link, Multiple Accounts
Before the accounts were recovered, several displayed identical pro‑Israel messaging—a detail that suggested shared credentials or centralized access, according to platform monitoring data.
That assessment was echoed across the cybersecurity community.
“The fact that several official X accounts seemed to fall in quick succession suggested some form of centralized control, possibly with the same credentials used across multiple accounts,” says Muhannad Abo Hajia, cybersecurity expert at Damascus-based group Sanad. “That kind of setup is not inherently wrong, but only if proper safeguards are in place.”
Experts say this pattern is consistent with common failures: password reuse, phishing attempts, compromised recovery channels, or the absence of multifactor authentication (MFA). In practice, one careless password or a single compromised recovery email could give outsiders control of multiple institutions.
“Account takeovers of this kind are common enough globally and usually result from familiar vulnerabilities: phishing, password reuse, compromised recovery emails, weak credentials, or the absence of MFA,” says Rinad Bouhadir, a cybersecurity engineer tracking the region.
A System Built on Fragile Foundations
The breach, specialists say, reflects not a targeted cyber‑offensive but deeper structural flaws.
“The current authorities inherited a near-nonexistent cybersecurity system and have yet to treat repairing it as a real priority,” says Dlshad Othman, a Syrian cybersecurity specialist.
He believes the incident likely stemmed from either a centralized unit managing several official accounts or a shared third‑party tool used across ministries—both of which create a single point of failure.
That design makes multiple agencies vulnerable at once. In moments of heightened tension, even one falsified post from a verified government account could stoke panic, misreporting, or escalation before correction.
A verified government account can be weaponized to spread false information in real time, particularly during periods of regional escalation, when confusion carries immediate real-world risk.
Tech
NASA shares breathtaking images of Artemis II astronauts taking in the view from Orion’s windows
The Artemis II crew is almost at the moon, and the astronauts spent this weekend carrying out preparations for their lunar flyby on Monday. That included manual piloting demonstrations, reviewing their science objectives for the six-hour observation period and evaluating their space suits, which are there for life support in the event of an emergency and for their return home. But, they’ve had plenty of time to take in the views, too — and those views sure are spectacular. In the latest series of images shared by the space agency, the astronauts are seen gazing at Earth through the windows of the Orion spacecraft.
Orion will reach the moon’s vicinity shortly after midnight on Monday, April 6. Later that day, the crew is expected to reach a point farther than any humans have traveled from Earth, surpassing the record of 248,655 miles from Earth set by the Apollo 13 astronauts in 1970.
Mission specialist Christina Koch takes in the view. (NASA)

The lunar observation period will start at 2:45PM ET, and a few hours later, they’ll be behind the moon and briefly drop out of communication. The spacecraft’s closest approach to the moon is expected to occur at 7:02PM, when it will be 4,066 miles from the surface. “From that distance, the crew will see the entire disk of the Moon at once, including regions near the north and south poles,” according to NASA. The crew will later get a chance to see a solar eclipse “as Orion, the Moon, and the Sun align in such a way that the astronauts will see our star disappear behind the Moon for about an hour.” NASA will have coverage of the flyby starting at 1PM ET.
Tech
Tiny Moves, Big Depth: An Open-Source Macro Focus Slider
When taking macro photographs, you often need just a tiny bit of controlled motion — so little that it’s tough to pull off by hand. To address this, [Salveo] designed a small open-source macro photography slider featuring an anti-backlash handle.
Macro photography gives you an extremely shallow field of view, sometimes under 1 mm of depth, in which subjects stay in focus. To combat this, it’s common to capture multiple images while sliding the camera forward or backward, then combine them for a much larger depth of field than a single shot provides. [Salveo]’s slider gives fine control over this focus-stacking process, with the knob even marked to show every 1 mm of linear travel.
The slider is built around a 150 mm linear rail, though it could easily be lengthened or shortened to suit your needs. A T8 leadscrew, paired with anti-backlash nuts, translates the knob’s rotation into smooth linear motion. The knob itself uses a custom-designed anti-backlash mechanism to ensure the slider works cleanly in either direction.
You can grab all the 3D-printable files as well as the full bill of materials from the project page. Be sure to check out [Salveo]’s build video below. Thanks [Tim L.] for sending in this awesome open-source slider. Be sure to check out some of the other macro photography projects we’ve covered, too.
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