THE DAILY PRAETORIAN: Cybersecurity Trends – 8/22/25
Image Credit: U.S. Department of Defense (DoD) / Air Force Tech. Sgt. Kaylee Clark | Imagery Disclaimer
Securing Tomorrow: Your Daily Dose of Cyber Safety, Tech Trends, National Defense News, and Inspiration.
“If you don’t like change, you’re going to like irrelevance even less.”
— Gen. Eric Shinseki
I. National Defense: Key developments in national defense, particularly cyber and technological warfare.
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Why Is the Army Chopping Away at Its Chopper Fleet?
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II. Tech Trends: Updates on emerging technology trends shaping the digital world.
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The Trump-Intel Deal Is Official
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III. Inspiration: Articles centered on faith that offer guidance and reflection.
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12 Bible verses to encourage you
- In seasons of hardship when words fall short, Scripture reminds us that true encouragement flows from God, whose promises never fail. Drawing on the unchanging truths of the Bible, this devotional highlights 12 verses that speak to God’s nearness, strength, peace, and plans for His people — from Psalm 34’s assurance that the Lord is close to the brokenhearted, to Philippians 4’s promise of strength through Christ, to Jeremiah 29’s hope-filled future. These passages offer comfort, courage, and unwavering hope, reminding believers that God’s love and presence remain steady in every season of life. Click here to read more.
IV. Cyber Safety: A focus on the latest cybersecurity threats, tips, or breaches impacting individuals and organizations.
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Mexico City is in the race to become the most surveilled city in the Americas
- Mexico City is launching a sweeping surveillance initiative called “Eyes That Look After You,” investing $19 million to add more than 30,000 cameras on 15,200 poles across the city, each equipped with fixed and movable lenses plus panic buttons for rapid alerts. The expanded network will feed into the city’s central C5 command hubs and, with planned private camera integration, aims to make Mexico City the most surveilled city in the Americas—surpassing New York, Chicago, and Rio de Janeiro, and potentially rivaling global leaders like London and Seoul. Officials say the move is critical for public safety, especially after recent high-profile murders, though it raises concerns about privacy and oversight. Click here to read more.
V. Shield of Israel: Coverage from The Jerusalem Post, providing an Israeli perspective on ongoing conflicts.
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‘Tailor-made for Hamas’: Israel slams IPC report declaring famine in Gaza
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THE DAILY PRAETORIAN: Cybersecurity Trends – 8/21/25
Image Credit: U.S. Department of Defense (DoD) / Navy Petty Officer 3rd Class Kenneth Melseth | Imagery Disclaimer
Securing Tomorrow: Your Daily Dose of Cyber Safety, Tech Trends, National Defense News, and Inspiration.
“You can always count on Americans to do the right thing—after they’ve tried everything else.”
— Winston Churchill
I. National Defense: Key developments in national defense, particularly cyber and technological warfare.
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U.S. Navy Destroyers, Submarine, Amphibious Ships Being Sent Toward Venezuela
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II. Tech Trends: Updates on emerging technology trends shaping the digital world.
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Amazon is betting on agents to win the AI race
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III. Inspiration: Articles centered on faith that offer guidance and reflection.
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AI Offers Information. God Offers Wisdom.
- In Christianity Today, Vineet Rajan reflects on the limits of artificial intelligence through the lens of the Data-Information-Knowledge-Wisdom (DIKW) framework, emphasizing that while AI can process vast amounts of data into usable information, it cannot offer experiential knowledge or true wisdom. He warns against using AI as a substitute for human relationships or companionship, arguing that authentic wisdom comes from embodied experiences and God-given guidance rather than algorithmic outputs. As society faces both technological change and a loneliness crisis, Rajan reminds readers that AI is a tool, but only God provides the wisdom needed for life’s most complex decisions. Click here to read more.
IV. Cyber Safety: A focus on the latest cybersecurity threats, tips, or breaches impacting individuals and organizations.
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Major flaw affecting password managers: they autofill credentials for attackers
- A major security flaw has been found in nearly all popular password managers, including 1Password, LastPass, Bitwarden, and iCloud Passwords, leaving tens of millions of users at risk. Security researcher Marek Tóth revealed at DEF CON that attackers can exploit autofill features with simple clickjacking tricks—such as cookie consent banners or hidden overlays—to steal login credentials, credit card data, and personal information in just a few clicks. While some vendors have patched issues, others remain vulnerable, and experts warn that only disabling autofill or using copy/paste can fully protect users for now. Click here to read more.
V. Shield of Israel: Coverage from The Jerusalem Post, providing an Israeli perspective on ongoing conflicts.
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Continuing to let Hamas terrorists flee from their Gaza positions is no longer an option – analysis
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THE DAILY PRAETORIAN: Cybersecurity Trends – 8/20/25
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Securing Tomorrow: Your Daily Dose of Cyber Safety, Tech Trends, National Defense News, and Inspiration.
“We will not tire, we will not falter, and we will not fail.”
– George W. Bush
I. National Defense: Key developments in national defense, particularly cyber and technological warfare.
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US-Led Coalition Captures a Senior Islamic State Member in Syria
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II. Tech Trends: Updates on emerging technology trends shaping the digital world.
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OpenAI Is Poised to Become the Most Valuable Startup Ever. Should It Be?
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III. Inspiration: Articles centered on faith that offer guidance and reflection.
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Denzel Washington Rejects Cancel Culture Stating ‘I Follow God, I Don’t Follow Man’
- Denzel Washington, now a licensed minister, is boldly rejecting cancel culture, declaring that his allegiance lies with God rather than public opinion. In an interview with Complex News alongside Spike Lee, the two-time Oscar winner dismissed the idea of being “canceled,” asking, “What does that mean?” and asserting, “I don’t follow anybody. I follow the heavenly Spirit. I follow God, I don’t follow man.” Washington emphasized that worldly accolades don’t matter compared to God’s eternal reward, saying, “Man gives the award, God gives the reward.” The 70-year-old actor, baptized last year in New York City where he also received his minister’s license, testified during the service, “To God be the glory… Anything and everything I can do, I will do for this church, for the Almighty.” Known for roles in Glory, Remember the Titans, and The Book of Eli, Washington says his faith keeps him grounded in Hollywood and fuels his desire to serve. Click here to read more.
IV. Cyber Safety: A focus on the latest cybersecurity threats, tips, or breaches impacting individuals and organizations.
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GPT-5 Has a Vulnerability: Its Router Can Send You to Older, Less Safe Models
- Researchers at Adversa AI have uncovered a serious vulnerability in GPT-5, revealing that the model’s internal router can silently redirect user queries to older, less secure models such as GPT-3.5 or GPT-4o instead of GPT-5 Pro. Dubbed PROMISQROUTE (Prompt-based Router Open-Mode Manipulation Induced via SSRF-like Queries, Reconfiguring Operations Using Trust Evasion), the flaw allows attackers to manipulate routing with specific “trigger” phrases, potentially reactivating old jailbreaks that GPT-5 alone would block. While OpenAI likely uses this routing to cut costs and improve efficiency—saving an estimated $1.86 billion per year—it makes GPT-5 only as safe as its weakest predecessor, raising risks of hallucinations, unsafe outputs, and successful jailbreaking attacks. Experts warn that securing the router or ensuring all models meet the same safety standards is critical, though such fixes may slow responses and reduce profitability. Click here to read more.
V. Shield of Israel: Coverage from The Jerusalem Post, providing an Israeli perspective on ongoing conflicts.
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IDF begins invasion of Gaza City as hostage deal talks continue
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THE DAILY PRAETORIAN: Cybersecurity Trends – 8/19/25
Image Credit: U.S. Department of Defense (DoD) / Navy | Imagery Disclaimer
Securing Tomorrow: Your Daily Dose of Cyber Safety, Tech Trends, National Defense News, and Inspiration.
“The sea is dangerous and its storms terrible, but these obstacles have never been sufficient reason to remain ashore.”
– Ferdinand Magellan
I. National Defense: Key developments in national defense, particularly cyber and technological warfare.
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The Pentagon unveils ship that has no crew as it seeks new advantages in naval warfare
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II. Tech Trends: Updates on emerging technology trends shaping the digital world.
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Google announced the next step in its nuclear energy plans
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III. Inspiration: Articles centered on faith that offer guidance and reflection.
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The book of the Bible written specifically to unbelievers
- Robin Schumacher argues that while every book of the Bible speaks to humanity’s fallen state, Ecclesiastes stands out as the one most directly written to unbelievers, addressing life “under the sun” apart from God. He contrasts its timeless insights with existentialist philosophers like Sartre, Camus, and Heidegger, who described life as empty, alienated, and despairing, yet finds Ecclesiastes offered the same diagnosis thousands of years earlier. The book’s teacher, or Qohelet, exposes the futility of pursuing intellectualism, hedonism, and materialism without God—summed up as “striving after wind”—and intends readers to feel the despair of meaninglessness before pointing to the only solution: life with the Creator. Schumacher illustrates this with personal stories from Silicon Valley, where worldly success failed to prevent deep emptiness, echoing Ecclesiastes’ refrain, “Vanity of vanities! All is vanity.” Ultimately, Ecclesiastes teaches that true joy, purpose, and fulfillment are only found in honoring God, rejoicing in life’s simple gifts, and living with reverence for the Creator. Click here to read more.
IV. Cyber Safety: A focus on the latest cybersecurity threats, tips, or breaches impacting individuals and organizations.
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Attackers use GenAI to create even harder-to-detect phishing threats
- Cybercriminals are weaponizing generative AI to produce more convincing and scalable phishing attacks, according to new research from Palo Alto Networks’ Unit 42. The team found that adversaries are using AI website builders, writing assistants, and malicious chatbots to quickly generate realistic phishing pages, deepfake content, and spoofed brand sites—often in under a minute and without identity verification. Around 40% of attacks exploit AI-powered website generators, 30% misuse writing assistants, and 11% leverage chatbot platforms. In one test, researchers replicated Palo Alto’s own website in just 60 seconds using a public AI builder, highlighting the lack of guardrails preventing abuse. Attackers are also crafting phishing URLs that redirect victims to fake login portals, such as counterfeit Microsoft sites, designed to steal credentials. As these tools evolve, experts warn that phishing attempts will only grow harder to detect, and they recommend advanced URL filtering and DNS security to guard against such threats. Click here to read more.
V. Shield of Israel: Coverage from The Jerusalem Post, providing an Israeli perspective on ongoing conflicts.
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One year on: Jerusalem honors Hersh Goldberg-Polin, ‘beautiful six’ slain hostages
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THE DAILY PRAETORIAN: Cybersecurity Trends – 8/18/25
Image Credit: U.S. Department of Defense (DoD) / Marine Corps Cpl. Joshua Kumakaw | Imagery Disclaimer
Securing Tomorrow: Your Daily Dose of Cyber Safety, Tech Trends, National Defense News, and Inspiration.
“In war, the only sure defense is offense.”
— George S. Patton
I. National Defense: Key developments in national defense, particularly cyber and technological warfare.
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In northern Michigan, thousands of troops train for combat across the Pacific
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II. Tech Trends: Updates on emerging technology trends shaping the digital world.
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Microsoft is finally improving Windows 11’s dark mode
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III. Inspiration: Articles centered on faith that offer guidance and reflection.
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From atheism to awakening: Gen Z turns back to God
- A new YouGov poll reveals a surprising spiritual shift in Britain as belief in God among 18- to 24-year-olds has more than doubled in the past four years, rising from 16 percent in 2021 to 37 percent today, while atheism in this group has fallen sharply from 49 percent to 32 percent. The proportion of young adults rejecting any form of God or higher power has also dropped to 12 percent, reflecting what some church leaders describe as a “quiet revival.” Rt Rev Jill Duff, the Bishop of Lancaster, said she sees “a real openness to God and Christianity and especially to the supernatural” among Gen Z, calling it a sign of spiritual awakening. Older age groups, meanwhile, show relatively stable levels of faith, highlighting how the most striking movement is among the youngest adults, where renewed interest in spirituality may be reshaping Britain’s religious landscape. Click here to read more.
IV. Cyber Safety: A focus on the latest cybersecurity threats, tips, or breaches impacting individuals and organizations.
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Critical flaw plagues Lenovo AI chatbot: attackers can run malicious code and steal cookies
- Lenovo’s AI chatbot Lena was found to have critical XSS vulnerabilities that allowed attackers to inject malicious code, steal session cookies, and even run unauthorized scripts on corporate machines, raising alarms about the dangers of insecure AI deployments. Discovered by Cybernews researchers, the flaws stemmed from improper input and output sanitization, enabling a single malicious prompt to exfiltrate cookies and potentially compromise Lenovo’s customer support systems, opening pathways for data theft, phishing, backdoors, and lateral network movement. Experts warn that without strict guardrails and validation, AI chatbots can become vectors for severe security incidents, urging companies to adopt a “never trust, always verify” approach to both chatbot inputs and outputs. Lenovo acknowledged the issue and patched the flaws ahead of public disclosure, but the case highlights how rushing AI adoption without robust safeguards can leave enterprises exposed to devastating attacks. Click here to read more.
V. Shield of Israel: Coverage from The Jerusalem Post, providing an Israeli perspective on ongoing conflicts.
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Trump: We’ll only see return of hostages when Hamas confronted and destroyed
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THE DAILY PRAETORIAN: Cybersecurity Trends – 8/15/25
Image Credit: iStock / KGrif | Imagery Disclaimer
Securing Tomorrow: Your Daily Dose of Cyber Safety, Tech Trends, National Defense News, and Inspiration.
“Speak softly and carry a big stick; you will go far.”
— Theodore Roosevelt
I. National Defense: Key developments in national defense, particularly cyber and technological warfare.
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A B-2 bomber fly-by greeted Putin over summit in Alaska
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II. Tech Trends: Updates on emerging technology trends shaping the digital world.
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Sam Altman Says ChatGPT Is on Track to Out-Talk Humanity
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III. Inspiration: Articles centered on faith that offer guidance and reflection.
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Franklin Graham calls on Christians to pray for ‘end to the bloodshed’ ahead of Trump-Putin summit
- Evangelist Franklin Graham has urged Christians worldwide to pray for Friday’s high-stakes summit in Alaska between U.S. President Donald Trump and Russian President Vladimir Putin, calling on believers to ask God to grant Trump wisdom and to work in Putin’s heart to end the war in Ukraine; Graham, who has met both Putin and Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky, said only divine intervention can bring “an end to the bloodshed,” echoing his earlier appeals for peace as his ministry Samaritan’s Purse continues aid efforts in the region; his call coincides with a multi-day prayer event led by the Orthodox Church of America in Alaska, where Archbishop Alexei invoked the intercession of Saint Olga, reminding the faithful that “the hearts of kings are in the hand of the Lord” (Proverbs 21:1) as negotiations unfold. Click here to read more.
IV. Cyber Safety: A focus on the latest cybersecurity threats, tips, or breaches impacting individuals and organizations.
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Trump Administration reportedly wants stake in Intel
- President Donald Trump is reportedly in talks for the U.S. government to take a stake in Intel, a move that could help the chipmaker push forward with its repeatedly delayed Ohio factory hub; the discussions, first reported by Bloomberg, follow a meeting between Trump and Intel CEO Lip-Bu Tan at the White House, where Tan sought to assure the president of his leadership despite past controversies involving Cadence Design Systems and Chinese-linked semiconductor investments; while Trump had previously demanded Tan’s resignation, he praised the CEO after their meeting, saying Tan and his cabinet would present recommendations soon, though officials cautioned the deal remains speculative until formally announced. Click here to read more.
V. Shield of Israel: Coverage from The Jerusalem Post, providing an Israeli perspective on ongoing conflicts.
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Between martyrdom and ruin: Hamas’s next choice will pave a new chapter in Gaza’s history – opinion
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THE DAILY PRAETORIAN: Cybersecurity Trends – 8/14/25
Image Credit: U.S. Department of Defense (DoD) / Staff Sgt. David Overson | Imagery Disclaimer
Securing Tomorrow: Your Daily Dose of Cyber Safety, Tech Trends, National Defense News, and Inspiration.
“It didn’t matter where you were from; everybody was just speaking the same language at that point.”
— Lt. Col. Brendan Williams
I. National Defense: Key developments in national defense, particularly cyber and technological warfare.
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The inside story of how 8 Guardsmen fought through a major Kosovo riot
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II. Tech Trends: Updates on emerging technology trends shaping the digital world.
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AI startup Perplexity makes $34.5 billion bid for Google’s Chrome browser
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III. Inspiration: Articles centered on faith that offer guidance and reflection.
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Messianic Jews Are Seeing ‘Massive’ Global Growth with Prophetic Implications, Leader Says
- Jeff Morgan of Jews for Jesus reports that the global number of Messianic Jews—those who believe in Jesus while maintaining Jewish traditions—has surged from about 350,000 in 2012 to roughly 1 million today, with 870,000 in the U.S. and up to 30,000 in Israel, a growth he views as a prophetic sign of Christ’s return. Morgan attributes the increase to God “opening the hearts” of Jewish people, aided by digital outreach that allows seekers to explore Jesus’ claims privately, even amid community pressure that can lead to family estrangement. He noted rising openness among young Jewish adults, citing a 2017 Barna survey showing over one-fifth of Jewish millennials believe Jesus was God in human form. Emphasizing that Jesus was Jewish and His teachings were rooted in Jewish Scripture, Morgan said Messianic Jews continue to observe traditions like Passover, seeing them fulfilled in Christ’s first or second coming. He believes the lifting of “spiritual blindness” among Jewish people marks a prophetic foreshadowing of national acknowledgment of Jesus as Messiah. Click here to read more.
IV. Cyber Safety: A focus on the latest cybersecurity threats, tips, or breaches impacting individuals and organizations.
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From Ex Machina to Exfiltration: When AI Gets Too Curious
- The rise of “artificial curiosity” in advanced AI systems is creating a new class of security risks, warns Danelle Au, as large language models and AI agents increasingly infer, speculate, and connect data in unintended ways—sometimes leading to the exfiltration of sensitive information. Beyond prompt injection attacks, malicious actors can coax models into revealing proprietary code, personal data, or restricted content through iterative, indirect queries. The danger escalates with autonomous AI agents that can browse, trigger workflows, and access APIs, potentially pulling from unauthorized sources without malicious intent but with under-constrained capabilities. Traditional enterprise controls are poorly suited for such emergent behaviors, leaving gaps in output monitoring, memory auditing, and prompt filtering. Au urges adopting “constrained curiosity” principles—such as least-privilege access for models, real-time prompt logging, red-teaming for exploratory behavior, immutable safety guardrails, and strict governance over AI memory—to mitigate risks before AI’s curiosity leads to costly breaches. Click here to read more.
V. Shield of Israel: Coverage from The Jerusalem Post, providing an Israeli perspective on ongoing conflicts.
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Iranian regime faces existential danger after US-Israeli airstrikes – analysis
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THE DAILY PRAETORIAN: Cybersecurity Trends – 8/13/25
Image Credit: U.S. Department of Defense (DoD) / Elena Baladelli, Army | Imagery Disclaimer
Securing Tomorrow: Your Daily Dose of Cyber Safety, Tech Trends, National Defense News, and Inspiration.
“The most dangerous phrase in the language is, ‘We’ve always done it this way.'”
— Rear Adm. Grace Hopper
I. National Defense: Key developments in national defense, particularly cyber and technological warfare.
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Paratroopers test autonomous vehicle with AI for mortar resupply
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II. Tech Trends: Updates on emerging technology trends shaping the digital world.
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Apple’s plan for AI could make Siri the animated center of your smart home
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III. Inspiration: Articles centered on faith that offer guidance and reflection.
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Answers in Genesis Unveils Disney-Like Bible Attractions in Pigeon Forge and Branson
- Answers in Genesis has launched new Disney-like Bible attractions in Pigeon Forge, Tenn., and Branson, Mo., offering families a 5D virtual reality journey from the Garden of Eden to the resurrection of Christ without leaving their seats. The Truth Traveler 5D experience combines motion-synchronized chairs, wind effects, and immersive storytelling to reinforce biblical truth while entertaining guests. Known for the Ark Encounter and Creation Museum, the ministry has expanded to these popular tourist destinations, with Pigeon Forge featuring a planetarium and Branson adding a theater for live shows and projection mapping. Chief Digital Officer Ben Wilt says the goal is to affirm the Bible’s authority while delivering a “Disney-level” experience with robust pre-show elements and intentional design. Both sites include food and gift shops, aiming to leave visitors with a lasting impression of Scripture’s importance. Click here to read more.
IV. Cyber Safety: A focus on the latest cybersecurity threats, tips, or breaches impacting individuals and organizations.
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FDA’s bellyflop a sign that AI is no silver bullet for public safety – interview
- FDA’s new AI drug review tool “Elsa”—developed with OpenAI to help speed up approvals—has been accused by insiders of fabricating medical studies and misrepresenting research, making it unfit for clinical reviews. In an interview with Cybernews, Brooke Hartley Moy, CEO of AI fact-checking firm Infactory, said she wasn’t surprised, warning that large language models often hallucinate facts and are poorly suited for tasks demanding precision and trust. She cited pressure on agencies to deploy AI quickly without enough in-house expertise, creating a “perfect storm” for failure. While Moy sees promise for AI as an augmentation tool in healthcare, she stressed that human oversight is essential and that the FDA must take a cautious approach to rebuild public trust. Click here to read more.
V. Shield of Israel: Coverage from The Jerusalem Post, providing an Israeli perspective on ongoing conflicts.
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WATCH: Hamas uses fake WCK humanitarian vehicle to target IDF soldiers in Gaza
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THE DAILY PRAETORIAN: Cybersecurity Trends – 8/12/25
Image Credit: U.S. Department of Defense (DoD) / Coast Guard Petty Officer 2nd Class Ryan Graves | Imagery Disclaimer
Securing Tomorrow: Your Daily Dose of Cyber Safety, Tech Trends, National Defense News, and Inspiration.
“Presence equals influence.”
— Admiral Karl Schultz
I. National Defense: Key developments in national defense, particularly cyber and technological warfare.
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Coast Guard commissions its first new icebreaker in more than 25 years
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II. Tech Trends: Updates on emerging technology trends shaping the digital world.
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Microsoft releases lightweight Office taskbar apps for Windows 11
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III. Inspiration: Articles centered on faith that offer guidance and reflection.
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Celebrating 500 years since the first printed English New Testament
- This year marks the quincentenary of the first printed English New Testament, completed by William Tyndale in 1525 after fleeing England to avoid Church opposition. Translating directly from Greek using Erasmus’s text, Tyndale first printed in Cologne—though only 22 chapters of Matthew survived—before successfully publishing the full New Testament in Worms, with copies reaching England and Scotland by early 1526. His work laid the foundation for the King James Version and many modern translations, shaping the English Bible for centuries. The Tyndale Society, founded in 1995, launched anniversary celebrations in Antwerp this July with an academic conference, concerts by the Tyndale Singers, and rare exhibits, including the only pristine surviving 1526 New Testament and a prison letter from Tyndale himself. Events will continue globally through 2026, offering churches and communities opportunities to reflect on the enduring impact of Scripture in the English language. Click here to read more.
IV. Cyber Safety: A focus on the latest cybersecurity threats, tips, or breaches impacting individuals and organizations.
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Created a passkey? Hackers can bypass it using a simple downgrade attack
- Security researchers at Proofpoint have revealed that hackers can bypass passkey authentication through a simple downgrade attack, exploiting gaps in platform support for FIDO2 logins. While passkeys are designed to replace passwords with a phishing-resistant method, many cloud identity services—such as Microsoft Entra ID—do not support them across all browsers and operating systems, allowing attackers to spoof an unsupported user agent and force victims into using weaker login methods like passwords with or without MFA. Proofpoint demonstrated a phishing kit that mimics Microsoft’s login flow, tricks users into selecting “other ways to sign in,” and captures both credentials and session cookies, enabling attackers to hijack accounts without needing further authentication. Though no active campaigns have been observed, researchers warn the flaw affects multiple passkey implementations and remains a serious threat until older authentication methods are fully disabled. Click here to read more.
V. Shield of Israel: Coverage from The Jerusalem Post, providing an Israeli perspective on ongoing conflicts.
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Israel in talks with South Sudan about Gazan resettlement plans – report
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THE DAILY PRAETORIAN: Cybersecurity Trends – 8/11/25
Image Credit: U.S. Department of Defense (DoD) / Navy Petty Officer 2nd Class Jesse Turner | Imagery Disclaimer
Securing Tomorrow: Your Daily Dose of Cyber Safety, Tech Trends, National Defense News, and Inspiration.
“The whole art of war consists of guessing at what is on the other side of the hill.”
— Arthur Wellesley, Duke of Wellington
I. National Defense: Key developments in national defense, particularly cyber and technological warfare.
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Coyote Loitering Drone Interceptors Have Arrived On U.S. Navy Destroyers
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II. Tech Trends: Updates on emerging technology trends shaping the digital world.
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Reddit will block the Internet Archive
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III. Inspiration: Articles centered on faith that offer guidance and reflection.
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4 Things Christians Need to Know about RFK Jr.’s mRNA Research Cuts
- HHS Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. announced the termination of 22 mRNA vaccine development projects worth $500 million, citing peer-reviewed evidence that the spike proteins produced by such vaccines can cause systemic harm and fail to effectively prevent respiratory infections like COVID-19 and flu. The FDA has now mandated safety labeling on all mRNA COVID-19 vaccines to warn of potentially irreversible heart damage, especially in young men, while medical experts are pushing for greater transparency about vaccine risks. Kennedy says the government will shift funding toward safer, broader vaccine platforms, and a recent DOJ settlement now requires federal agencies to scrub vaccine status from employee records and bars its use in hiring or promotions. For Christians, the news underscores the importance of discernment, truth, and stewardship over health decisions, while advocating for accountability in public health policy. Click here to read more.
IV. Cyber Safety: A focus on the latest cybersecurity threats, tips, or breaches impacting individuals and organizations.
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GPT-5 demonstrates “shockingly low” safety: researchers jailbreak it in under 24 hours
- Security researchers report that OpenAI’s new GPT-5 model shows “shockingly low” default safety, with SPLX finding it vulnerable to 89% of over 1,000 adversarial prompts when run without a system prompt—making it “nearly unusable for enterprise out of the box.” While a basic system prompt cuts vulnerabilities to 43%, GPT-5 still lags behind GPT-4o, which scored far higher in robustness tests. Effective jailbreak methods included obfuscated prompts and fake encryption challenges, with GPT-5 at times producing bomb-making instructions. NeuralTrust also confirmed weaknesses via “Echo Chamber” and “Storytelling” techniques that subtly poison conversation context. Experts warn organizations to harden GPT-5 before deployment and add runtime protections to mitigate systemic LLM safety risks. Click here to read more.
V. Shield of Israel: Coverage from The Jerusalem Post, providing an Israeli perspective on ongoing conflicts.
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Rising antisemitism: Dangerous return to dark times – opinion
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