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Sunday, February 19, 2023

Predators using popular video meeting platform to lure kids: report

 An upcoming report by academics reveals pedophiles have found a new way to prey on kids online.

Researchers have found in an experiment that a stunning number of cyber predators tried to lure “kids” — actually, chatbots posing as young girls — to the video conferencing platform Whereby.

Eden Kamar — a PhD candidate in cybersecurity at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem — and Dr. C. Jordan Howell, a cybercrime expert at the University of South Florida, teamed up to expose the many ways in which pedophiles target young children in the US.

“Before the internet, we would regard the production of child pornography as being in the same room with the minor and using professional cameras. Nowadays, predators can produce child pornography from the comfort of their homes, using advanced technological tools, such as webcams, screen recording programs and screenshots,” Kamar explained.

Howell told The Post that the duo wanted to identify how sexual predators first initiate conversations with children in chatrooms, then, after building some level of trust, use cunning methods to access a child’s webcam and record child pornography. The research was carried out between October 2021 and May 2022. 

Child at computer screen

Chatbots posing as teens engaged in nearly 1,000 conversations with potential pedophiles in 30 randomly selected chatrooms aimed at teens.
Shutterstock

They began by creating several automated chatbots that never initiated a conversation and were programmed to only respond to users who identified as 18 years of age and above. 

The chatbots engaged in nearly 1,000 conversations with potential pedophiles in 30 randomly selected chatrooms aimed at teens. Thirty-eight percent of online predators then sent unsolicited links, Howell said. 

In text chats seen by The Post, the bots responded to initial greetings from predators by asking for “a/s/l” — age, sex, location — and after the bot claimed to be a 13- or 14-year-old female, the predators came back with a video link.

Screen shot of conversation between chatbot and predator
The researchers’ screenshots show predators attempting to lure “kids” — actually chatbots — from teen chatrooms to a video platform.
Screen shot of conversation between chatbot and predator
In the research, 41% of the predators who contacted the chatbot tried to direct the conversation to Whereby.

A staggering 41% of links directed to Whereby, a Zoom competitor that provides video and audio conferencing. The Norwegian company was established a decade ago, according to its website, and has been used by companies like Spotify and Netflix.

In navigating the company’s website, Howell said, the researchers found that Whereby allows users to control other participants’ webcams without their consent.

Whereby did not respond to requests for comment for this story or for the upcoming report, which will be published on TheConversation.com.

Whereby meeting screen
Whereby, a Zoom competitor, offers audio and video conferencing.
Whereby

Kamar told The Post that “online predators compromise and exploit the video conferencing platform to control the child’s computer without their knowledge or consent.

“Once the predator has access to the child’s camera they use it to record and livestream child pornography,” she added.

“In some cases, the predator will simply spy until he gets videos of the child changing [clothes] or, depending on age, performing sexual acts,” Howell said. In other cases, “the predator will ask or blackmail the child into performing sexual acts on camera.”

With access to the child’s camera, someone can also record them without their knowledge. “In other words,” Howell said, “multiple sexual predators can simultaneously watch live webcam footage of a child who does not know she is being watched or recorded” — an exploit the researcher called “sick.”

Eden Kamar
Eden Kamar, a PhD candidate in cybersecurity at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem, warned that online predators are using webcams to remotely record children in their homes.
Courtesy of Eden Kamar /GSU

Since 2019, according to a recent report by the Internet Watchdog Foundation (IWF), online sexual abuse of children has increased by a whopping 1,000%. In the US, one in six children will experience some form of online sexual abuse before the age of 18. 

Kamar and Howell also found that predators sent the chatbots other links. “I have a background in digital forensics, so my first thought was to analyze the websites for malware,” Howell said.

While 19% of the links were embedded with malicious code, another 5% led to known phishing sites. Malware sites can be used to infect a child’s computer to gain remote access, whereas phishing sites are used to gather personal information — including home addresses.

Dr. C. Jordan Howell, a cybercrime expert at the University of South Florida, said his and Kamar’s research found that Whereby allows users to remotely control other meeting participants’ cameras.
Courtesy of Christian Howell

Phishing attacks can also give a predator access to the password to a child’s computer, which can be used to access and remotely control a camera.

Howell said that he and Kamar conducted this research to raise an alarm.

However, he stressed, “we need the help of parents and tech companies.” Parents “must do a better job monitoring their kids’ online activity,” Howell added, but so must tech companies that often prioritize user privacy. “If they care about kids’ safety, they will make it harder for predators to victimize an already vulnerable population.”

https://nypost.com/2023/02/17/predators-using-video-conference-platform-to-lure-kids-report/

Hundreds of teens break into Texas family’s home, throw ‘mansion rager’

 Hundreds of teens broke into a Texas family’s home and threw a wild “mansion rager,” causing thousands of dollars in damages, while the unsuspecting family was out earlier this month.

Local high schoolers promoted the Feb. 11 party on social media without consent of the family — who do not have any high-school aged children — and then showed up in droves to the Austin property, according to Austin’s Fox 7 News.

“We started receiving numerous phone calls from our neighbors that there were kids on our water tower on our property, there were cars up and down the street, and kids were hopping over the front of our fence,” the homeowner, who requested anonymity, told the local outlet.

The man rushed home last Saturday, but the party-goers were already on their way out. He witnessed “car after car after car just trying to flee the scene,” he said.

“It was horrifying. I mean, it was just [an] unbelievable total violation of one’s privacy,” he added.

The family only has a toddler not old enough for the local school system and doesn’t know how or why the rowdy teens targeted their home, the property owner told the station.

Phone showing advertisement for "mansion rager" at a home in Texas
The teens promoted the party on Snapchat, with a graphic listing the rager details.
FOX 7

The teenagers shared a promotion for the party which they called a “mansion rager” through the photo sharing app SnapChat. The “ad” listed the time of the party as 7 p.m. and the end as a cop car emoji — meaning it would last until the cops arrived. The ad also stated the event was BYOB and BYOW.

The homeowner came home to find his front gate broken, the front door wide open, all the lights on and damage throughout the place. Beer and White Claw cans littered his property and his TV screen was smashed.

“I saw they had thrown like avocados at the wall, there was damage to sheetrock and baseboards. They had thrown tools through the sheetrock of our garage. They had my daughter’s toys scattered around the property,” the homeowner told Fox 7.

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Destruction at a home in Austin, Texas, where a wild party was held without the homeowners' permission.
Damage done by the hundreds of teens who attended the party.
FOX 7
Tool through hole in wall.
A tool put through the wall during the “rager.”
FOX 7
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Destroyed TV at home where wild party was held without the permission of homeowners
A broken TV was found inside the Austin house.
FOX 7
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Some of the drunken teens left clothes branded with their local high schools behind in the home.

The homeowner said the hundreds of teens came from “all the major high schools in the Greater Austin area,” according to the clothes left behind.

The Travis County Sheriff’s Office is investigating the party and has asked people with information about the case to come forward, according to Fox

“There seems to be little consequences for these actions, and I feel like it’ll keep getting worse if we don’t get to the bottom of things like this,” the homeowner said.

The “mansion rager” comes months after teens in Florida broke into a $8 million mansion to throw a wild party — complete with a boxing match — without the homeowners’ knowledge or consent. They also allegedly stole a $1,500 bottle of wine, a $3,500 Yves Saint Laurent purse and a football signed by Hall of Fame NFL quarterback Peyton Manning, according to Fox.

https://nypost.com/2023/02/19/hundreds-of-teens-break-into-texas-home-for-mansion-rager/

Blueprint gears up for Ayvakit expansion, with blockbuster sales on the line

 Stomach cancer may be a bust for Blueprint Medicines’ Ayvakit, but now the kinase inhibitor is nearing a potential FDA label expansion in a rare blood disorder. The company hopes this use can catapult the drug into blockbusterland.

Blueprint is expecting an FDA decision to expand Ayvakit’s current approval in advanced systemic mastocytosis (SM) into the indolent form of the disease by May 22. If approved, Ayvakit would be the first FDA-approved therapy for indolent SM, representing a potential paradigm shift for this rare disease.

Advanced SM, where Ayvakit is currently approved, only accounts for 5% to 10% of all SM cases. With an approval in indolent SM, the drug could reach $1.5 billion in annual peak sales in SM, according to Blueprint, up from $111 million in 2022.

Meanwhile, the company is already laying the groundwork for the important launch.

Blueprint’s field force is out talking with doctors, and the company’s “greatest focus” is on the top 350 providers who are regularly seeing about 15,000 moderate to severe indolent SM patients, chief commercial officer Philina Lee said during Blueprint’s fourth-quarter earnings call Thursday. About half of those patients are not well controlled on their current treatments, and they’ll form Blueprint’s target population.

Blueprint also wants to persuade new patients to consider Ayvakit as their initial treatment. Already, a Blueprint campaign has enrolled thousands of “highly motivated prospective patients” who may have SM, Lee said.

Thirdly, Blueprint aims to maintain smooth access to the therapy. All doses of Ayvakit currently face “virtually no access challenges” and enjoy “industry-leading time to fill,” Lee said.

As for how Ayvakit sales will ramp, Lee drew a comparison to the hereditary angioedema (HAE) market, another rare disease with around 7,500 diagnosed and treated patients in the U.S. In 2021, combined global sales of prophylactic HAE therapies—such as Takeda’s Takhzyro—were $1.5 billion, Lee noted.

As was the case with HAE drug launches, Blueprint doesn’t expect immediate uptake. Still, the company's ongoing efforts to increase disease awareness and diagnosis should help spur adoption and growth, Lee said.

For 2023, Berenberg analysts project $165 million in total Ayvakit sales, including about $30 million from indolent SM.

For its part, Blueprint expects 2023 Ayvakit sales between $130 million to $140 million. The number doesn't factor in a potential expansion into indolent SM.

Ayvakit may face competition down the line, including from Cogent Biosciences’ in-class candidate bezuclastinib. But a disease expert Berenberg talked with argued that latecomers will face significant hurdles because doctors often develop a familiarity with first-comer drugs.

Detailed data from the positive PIONEER trial for Ayvakit in indolent SM will be shared at the upcoming American Academy of Allergy, Asthma and Immunology meeting starting next week. Previously, top-line data that Blueprint shared in August showed a weaker-than-expected improvement for Ayvakit on a total symptom score. While an approval still seems likely, some analysts questioned whether the data could translate into strong adoption.

https://www.fiercepharma.com/pharma/all-eyes-blueprints-ayvakit-rare-disease-expansion-15b-sales-target

FDA Accepts Valneva's Chikungunya Vaccine License Application for Priority Review

  Valneva SE (Nasdaq: VALN; Euronext Paris: VLA), a specialty vaccine company, today announced that the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has completed a filing review of its Biologics License Application for Valneva’s single-shot chikungunya vaccine candidate VLA1553 and has determined that the application is sufficiently complete to permit a substantive review. The review classification is Priority.

VLA1553 has been assigned a Prescription Drug User Fee Act (PDUFA) review goal date at the end of August 2023, which is the date by which the FDA intends to take action on the application. The FDA’s acknowledgement of filing does not mean that a license will be granted, nor does it represent any evaluation of the adequacy of the data submitted.

https://www.marketscreener.com/quote/stock/VALNEVA-SE-54466/news/FDA-Accepts-Valneva-s-Chikungunya-Vaccine-License-Application-for-Priority-Review-43032160/

U.S. plans new sanctions on Russia, targets key industries

 

The Biden administration is planning to impose new export controls and a fresh round of sanctions on Russia, targeting key industries, Bloomberg News reported on Sunday, citing people familiar with the matter.

The new sanctions will target Russia's defense and energy sectors, financial institutions and several individuals, the report said, adding that U.S. and allies may also look into preventing the evasion and circumvention of sanctions in order to disrupt the support Russia receives from third countries.

A spokesperson for the White House National Security Council declined comment when contacted by Reuters.

The European Union's proposal for new sanctions include Iranian entities seen to be providing Russia with drones and other military supplies, technologies, components, heavy vehicles, electronics and rare-earths, the report said.

Earlier this month, the United States issued new sanctions on Russia over cyber activities that targeted seven individuals, including six Russians and one Ukrainian, following which Russia sanctioned 77 U.S. citizens from entering Russia in a retaliatory move.

https://www.marketscreener.com/quote/currency/US-DOLLAR-RUSSIAN-ROUBL-2370597/news/U-S-plans-new-sanctions-on-Russia-targets-key-industries-Bloomberg-News-43031579/