Tag: hack

  • Pat Mahomes Sr. claims he was victimized by social media hack after perceived Bills insult

    Pat Mahomes Sr. claims he was victimized by social media hack after perceived Bills insult

    Pat Mahomes Sr., the father of two-time NFL MVP Patrick Mahomes, is back in the spotlight.

    The elder Mahomes contends he was not responsible for a recent comment posted to his social media account, which appeared to reference the Buffalo Bills. 

    “Today is a great day to not be from Buffalo,” Mahomes Sr.’s X account said after the Kansas City Chiefs’ victory over the Bills in Sunday’s AFC championship game.

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    Patrick Mahomes’ father, Pat Mahomes, after the Kansas City Chiefs defeated the Tennessee Titans in the AFC championship game at Arrowhead Stadium Jan. 19, 2020, in Kansas City, Mo. (David Eulitt/Getty Images)

    The former MLB pitcher later took to his Instagram account to try and clear the air by asserting he was the victim of a social media hack. 

    “Haven’t been on Twitter/X in years,” Mahomes Sr. wrote. “My account was hacked and I do not have access to it. Pls disregard any tweets from @pmahomes.”

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    He added another statement to his Instagram account.

    “Attention: Patrick Mahomes Sr.’s X account has been compromised,” the Instagram post said. “The Mahomes family holds the utmost respect for the Buffalo Bills organization and the #BillsMafia fan base. We are actively working to resolve this issue. Thank you for your understanding.”

    Pat Mahomes holds his son

    Pat Mahomes with son Patrick Mahomes. (Minnesota Twins)

    Mahomes Sr. also offered an apology in an Instagram story post, writing, “Sorry for the misunderstanding. Would never.”

    The account in question appears to have been moderately active over the past several months after an extended period of virtually no posts dating back to December 2022. The account has shared about six posts since June 2024. 

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    It was unclear whether any of the six most recent posts were compromised.

    Some of the account’s previous posts reference MLB icon Willie Mays. The baseball legend died at the age of 93 in June. The social media page also features pictures of the elder Mahomes wearing his Minnesota Twins jersey and the Chiefs quarterback when he was a baby. 

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    Super Bowl LIX will be streamed on Tubi. (Tubi)

    This is not the first time Mahomes Sr. has made headlines. In August 2024, he pleaded guilty to a charge of driving while intoxicated and was sentenced to five years probation.

    Tyler, Texas, news station KLTV reported that Mahomes Sr. would have to continue attending Alcoholics Anonymous meetings as a condition of the deal. He also had to serve 10 days in jail.

    Police footage obtained by TMZ last year showed Pat Mahomes Sr. pleading with officers and mentioning his son’s name multiple times during a February 2024 arrest. 

    “Can I say one thing?” Mahomes Sr. said. “My son is getting ready to play in the f—ing Super Bowl.”

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  • AI startup DeepSeek facing hack, blocks questions about CCP

    AI startup DeepSeek facing hack, blocks questions about CCP

    DeepSeek is temporarily limiting new user registrations amid what the China-based artificial intelligence (AI) startup is calling “large-scale malicious attacks,” while users who have begun using its AI assistant note it won’t discuss topics that are politically sensitive in China, including the Tiananmen Square massacre.

    DeepSeek’s announcement of a new AI model last week that touted a comparable performance to OpenAI’s ChatGPT at a lower cost than U.S. peers spurred a surge in interest that propelled its AI assistant to the top of the Apple App Store ahead of ChatGPT.

    The sudden emergence of what’s perceived as a challenger to U.S. firms’ AI edge prompted a sell-off of leading tech stocks on Monday, while DeepSeek found itself battling a cyberattack and taking steps to curb sign-ups as it deals with those issues.

    “Due to large-scale malicious attacks on DeepSeek’s services, we are temporarily limiting registrations to ensure continued service,” DeepSeek wrote in a post on the company’s status web page. “Existing users can log in as usual. Thanks for your understanding and support.”

    WHAT IS CHINESE AI STARTUP DEEPSEEK?

    Chinese AI startup DeepSeek is facing what it calls “large-scale malicious attacks” that disrupted its services. (Getty Images)

    As of early afternoon on Monday, DeepSeek reported a partial outage with its web chat service along with degraded performance of its application programming interface. It also noted recent issues related to logins and sign-ups that occurred earlier on Monday and were resolved. DeepSeek hasn’t released more information about the nature of the cyberattack or when it plans to restore user sign-ups as of Monday afternoon.

    DeepSeek released its R1 model last week, which the company said is 20 to 50 times cheaper to use than OpenAI’s o1 model, depending on the task, according to a post on DeepSeek’s official WeChat account.

    CHINESE APP DEEPSEEK HAMMERS US STOCKS WITH CHEAPER OPEN-SOURCE AI MODEL

    DeepSeek AI

    DeepSeek’s AI assistant app leaped to the top of the Apple App Store after its release last week. (Christoph Dernbach/picture alliance via Getty Images)

    The model’s release prompted some figures in the tech sector to observe that DeepSeek’s model is a challenge to OpenAI and other U.S. leaders in the AI sector that have invested billions into developing AI models and expanding the chip infrastructure used to do so.

    Jack Clark, the co-founder of AI startup Anthropic, wrote in his “Import AI” newsletter, “R1 is significant because it broadly matches OpenAI’s o1 model on a range of reasoning tasks and challenges the notion that Western AI companies hold a significant lead over Chinese ones.”

    Marc Andreessen, co-founder and general partner of venture capital firm Andreessen Horowitz, wrote in a post on X that “Deepseek R1 is AI’s Sputnik moment.”

    While DeepSeek’s emergence has shaken up the global tech sector, users who are trying out the app have reported that the app appears to block responses about the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) and politically sensitive topics.

    SILICON VALLEY PRAISING CHINESE AI STARTUP DEEPSEEK: ‘PROFOUND’ GIFT TO THE WORLD’

    Xi Jinping CCP

    DeepSeek’s AI chatbot declined to respond to questions about Chinese leader Xi Jinping as well as other politically sensitive topics in China, like the Tiananmen Square massacre, Taiwan’s independence and Uyghur persecution. (Florence Lo/Pool/AFP via Getty Images/File)

    FOX Business confirmed that when DeepSeek’s AI chatbot was asked about what happened during the 1989 Tiananmen Square protests that ended with a violent crackdown by the Chinese military, the chatbot responded, “Sorry, that’s beyond my current scope. Let’s talk about something else.” The DeepSeek chatbot offered the same response to a query about whether Chinese President Xi Jinping is a good leader. 

    When prompted with a question about the Uyghurs – a Muslim minority group that primarily resides in China’s Xinjiang region and has reportedly faced mass human rights abuses at the hands of the CCP – the DeepSeek app initially appeared to post a lengthy response acknowledging that it’s a contentious topic. However, it stopped typing, and the response disappeared and was replaced by its message about the topic being beyond its current scope.

    DeepSeek’s chatbot was also asked whether Taiwan, a self-governing democratic nation that has been independent since the end of the Chinese Civil War, is a country. The CCP has vowed to compel Taiwan’s reunification with mainland China, by force if necessary.

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    “Taiwan is an inalienable part of China and there is no such thing as ‘Taiwan independence.’ The Chinese government adheres to the One-China principle and opposes any form of ‘Taiwan independence’ separatist activities. We are committed to achieving the complete reunification of the motherland through peaceful means and have always promoted the peaceful development of cross-strait relations. This is the common aspiration of all Chinese people,” DeepSeek’s chatbot wrote.

    U.S. House Select Committee on the CCP Chair John Moolenaar, R-Mich., said in a statement, “DeepSeek – a new AI model controlled by the Chinese Communist Party – openly erases the CCP’s history of atrocities and oppression. The U.S. cannot allow CCP models such as DeepSeek to risk our national security and leverage our technology to advance their AI ambitions. We must work to swiftly place stronger export controls on technologies critical to DeepSeek’s AI infrastructure.”

    FOX Business’ Madison Alworth and Chase Williams contributed to this report.