Wednesday, June 24, 2026

Malware Hides Behind Steam Workshop

Malware
One of the best arguments for buying games through Steam is the Steam Workshop. This community hub lets users seamlessly download and install mods for their favorite games. No searching for the right files and the folders they go in; Steam Workshop does all the hard work.

However, since all the content is user-created, sometimes malicious coders upload virus-laden items, and victims are often none the wiser.

Earlier this week, Kaspersky blew the whistle on a new virus that hijacks Steam user accounts. This news came several months after the FBI warned about seven Steam games hiding malware.

According to Kaspersky, hackers are exploiting the sharing features of Steam Workshop's Wallpaper Engine. Unlike your average computer wallpaper, the Wallpaper Engine specializes in animated wallpapers (think the animated backgrounds you can get on your Xbox Series X/S and PlayStation 5), so there's more space for hackers to hide malicious code.

Kaspersky's analysis indicates that while only "dozens" of these malware-laden wallpapers exist, they are extremely popular — each has been downloaded thousands or tens of thousands of times. While anyone who installs the wallpapers will get infected, currently the people who built them are mostly targeting Chinese players.

How so? The art styles and titles are "tailored specifically to them." 89 percent of all victims hail from China, followed by Russia at 5.5 percent.

As previously stated, the virus is designed to attract people with certain sensibilities. The wallpapers lure victims in with images of women that can be best described as waifu material. And then when downloaded, the virus springs into action.

According to Kaspersky's analysis, once the wallpaper is launched, it installs a backdoor and an executable file that acts as a "game" while also digging for Steam account credentials. Once the executable has what it needs, it sends the data to a server that the hacker owns. From there, they have full control over your account; they can change your password, steal your credit card information, and upload more infested wallpapers under your name. Oh, and they can also hide all of your files behind ransomware and install crypto miner software if they want.

Kaspersky claims the malware is spread in two ways. The first is the most straightforward: Hackers draw from an archive of wallpapers compromised with malicious EXE files, DLLs, and scripts.

However, Kaspersky says some versions of the malware spread by turning victims into unwitting gofers. Basically, the target is tricked into accessing a protected archive containing the malware by entering its password. Although, sometimes the hacker installs a script that does it for them — not all of us are technologically literate enough to shoot ourselves in the foot.

Obviously, the best way to avoid this malware is to stay clear of Steam Workshop's Wallpaper Engine for the time being. If you really need a special wallpaper, use obscure Windows apps such as WinDynamicDesktop or download Van Gogh-inspired wallpapers for your Mac. However, let's assume that you downloaded these wallpapers before reading this article. You're not doomed just yet.

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Saturday, June 20, 2026

Jerry Seinfeld Funny Take Down Of Anti-Israel Protester

Seinfeld
Comedian Jerry Seinfeld was able to shut down an anti-Israel influencer by telling him Palestine "doesn't exist" after he was rushed while leaving the Garden last 10 June following the Knicks' Game 4 win.

The legendary comedian, 72, was walking among the throngs of people after the game when he was ambushed by a struggling streamer armed with a mic and camera.

"What up, Seinfeld? What up? Can we get a 'Free Palestine'?" said the streamer, FinesseFave, sticking a mic in the face of the Jewish actor and writer.

The famously quick-on-his-feet standup responded with a laugh before shutting down the incendiary question in three words.

"It doesn't exist," he said, before walking away.

FinesseFave later shared the video with his 180,000 TikTok followers, along with the caption, "Clown hasn't been relevant in decades anyway."

@finessefave Clown hasn’t been relevant in decades anyway #finessefave #nyc ♬ original sound - finessefave

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Friday, June 19, 2026

Lesbian Couple "Triggered" Over Comedian's Crowd Work

A lesbian couple went to see a comedian perform in Boston. Then they were made fun of by the comedian multiple times during crowd work. They got too sensitive and can't handle it.

TikToker Desii (@xoxo.desii) posted a section of a Boston comedian's set where he singled her and her girlfriend out. Desii said that she laughed because she was uncomfortable and that she almost cried during the set because of comments the comedian made.

So, this begs the question, why did she stay? She should not attend a comedy show because they make fun of everyone, regardless of yout feelings.

Desii, who has a girlfriend, tagged the post #wlw. WLW stands for "women loving women." It's a broad term that refers to women who are attracted to other women. It can also describe non-binary or female-aligned people who are attracted to women.

Desii started recording a portion of a comedian's set at some point after he realized that she was a lesbian. The comedian referred to her by race and started making jokes about her.

"Oh, it's like 90 degrees up here, and she's Mexican and a lez," the comedian said. "My whole time up here I've just been picturing her just getting ...  Anyway. It's on. Anyone else, fellas?"

Viewers on the post summed up what the comedian may have been implying. One viewer said, "He's saying he's been imagining her and her gf having [expletive]."

The comedian continued and told his audience he wasn't joking about the sexual innuendo. "I mean, I'm not kidding at all. Nothing I've said here is a joke tonight. I want you to know that," the comedian said in the clip. "This has been all real. I'm kidding. I don't know what's real anymore. I really don't."

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Saturday, June 13, 2026

Will Google Searches Go To An AI Mode In Chrome?

Google AI Mode
A flag hidden in Chrome Canary, the developers' version of Google's browser, suggested the company was considering sending all search queries directly to AI Mode by default. Windows Report first noticed the flag.

Windows Report says it tested and confirmed that when the flag was enabled it worked in Canary, bringing users to what appeared to be a chatbot-like response, rather than the standard Google Search results.

But while Google may be adding more AI to search and other products, Rajan Patel, Google vice president, engineering for search said last 5 June that the flag is "an error. We're not planning to make AI Mode the default for Chrome searches."

The traditional Google Search in Chrome now includes a summarized AI Overview at the top of the results page, above the list of links to different websites. To use AI Mode in Chrome, users have to first toggle it on.

Google announced a major overhaul of of its Search at its I/O 2026 conference in May, including a lot more AI features. The search box has been redesigned to be AI-powered, allowing for longer queries the company says go "beyond autocomplete" and its search now supports Gemini Flash 3.5 in AI Mode.

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Friday, June 12, 2026

AWS Is Building An Internet For The Machines

Internet
Cloud infrastructure has long been designed around humans who search, click, scroll, and stream in a steady and predictable fashion. AI agents behave differently. They can unleash a swell of activity, spinning up multiple sub-agents that query hundreds of databases, search documents, and call APIs in seconds and then disappear as quickly as they arrived.

Under that premise, Amazon is redesigning a core piece of its cloud infrastructure.

On 28 May, AWS launched its next generation of OpenSearch Serverless, a fully managed search and vector database — essentially a system for storing and retrieving information at scale — that’s designed specifically for agentic workloads. AWS says the new system can instantly scale up when agents trigger tasks and scale back down to zero when idle.

The launch reflects a growing realization across the tech industry: Infrastructure originally designed for a human-driven internet doesn’t work as well in a world increasingly populated by agents.

While AI agents still represent a relatively small portion of internet activity, machine-generated traffic is already significant, and poised to grow. Cloudflare says bots accounted for 31 percent of overall HTTP traffic over the last six months. AI crawlers, search engines, and assistants made up roughly a quarter of all bot requests during that period.

"Non-human traffic will exceed human traffic sometime in the first half of 2027," said Lai Yi Ohlsen, senior product manager at Cloudflare, to TechCrunch.

At Google’s I/O developer conference last week, the company said users will be able to start delegating tasks to AI systems, like researching purchases, booking travel, browsing the web, and interacting with apps. But the buck doesn’t stop at consumer-focused AI agents. Enterprises are increasingly deploying agents internally and for their customers, creating new kinds of machine-generated traffic behind the scenes.

As a result, cloud providers and infrastructure companies have been reckoning with how to adapt systems built for humans to a world of agents that are constantly and autonomously retrieving information, invoking tools, and generating machine-to-machine traffic.

That’s where AWS’s new OpenSearch Serverless comes in.

"The timing is straightforward. Agents are moving from experimentation into production, and they create traffic patterns that previous infrastructure simply wasn’t designed for," Tia White, general manager for Amazon OpenSearch Service, told TechCrunch. "They spike without warning, they go idle without notice, and enterprise needs search that keeps up without paying for empty or idle compute."

The key technical change with this new generation is that it decouples compute from storage, allowing compute to scale up in seconds to accommodate agent traffic bursts and to scale down to zero, so customers pay US$ 0 when agents are idle.

"Previously, even in our prior Serverless version, you had to have at least one instance operational and running because storage and compute were coupled," White said. "You couldn’t just automatically spin up [compute] at the rate you needed to, so you always had idle compute reserved for your workload, whether you were using it or not."

Think of it like always paying for a parking space, even when you’re not using it. With AWS’s upgraded Serverless, it’s more like paying for a metered parking spot.

At launch, OpenSearch Serverless will integrate natively with AI development platforms like Vercel and Kiro, so developers can deploy production-ready search and vector backends for agents without managing infrastructure.

The shift is emerging across the cloud industry. Databricks and Snowflake are repositioning themselves as AI memory and retrieval systems for enterprise data. Microsoft has rolled out updates to Azure designed to handle AI agent bursts and share memory between agents. Cloudflare, in a similar vein to Amazon, last month introduced infrastructure aimed at giving agents persistent environments and instant scalability.

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