Trump’s National Security Strategy Is a Blueprint for White Nationalism
Juan Cole

Trump’s foreign policy reasoning mirrors the crackpot logic of a runaway authoritarian.
The post Trump’s National Security Strategy Is a Blueprint for White Nationalism appeared first on The Nation.
Tinder Plans to Let AI Scan Your Camera Roll
In a feature the dating app says is set to roll out in the U.S. later this spring, Tinder plans to access users’ camera rolls to pick photos and determine what they’re into.
One fifth of ID theft victims will have their identity reused: Synectics

More than 20 percent of ID theft victims have their identity reused to access different financial services and products, according to data from National SIRA, the UK’s largest fraud database.
In one particular case, a single stolen identity was used 10 times across seven products in four different sectors, including motor insurance, loans, credit cards, mobile phones and business banking. Around a fifth (19 percent) of reused identities are also later utilized to create synthetic identities, notes a report from National SIRA’s operator Synectics Solutions.
The data analysis and fraud prevention firm highlights that stolen identity reuse rises to 66 percent in cases linked to ghost broking, a form of insurance fraud where scammers pose as insurance middlemen to sell fake motor insurance policies. The number of ghost broking victims has risen by 93 percent year-on-year, the research warns.
Most reused identities remain active for more than 90 days, harming both identity theft victims and organizations. To speed up fraud investigations, organizations should rely on both cross-sector information and their own data
“Our new findings make clear that identity theft can no longer be treated as a single event to resolve,” says Synectics Solutions CEO Richard Wood. “Our collective mindset must now shift from finding a fraud incident, to interrupting the harm that builds for victims throughout the identity misuse lifecycle.”
In a separate report published earlier this week, fraud database Cifas revealed that the UK has registered over 242,000 cases of identity fraud during 2025. Although identity fraud filings fell by three percent year-on-year, it remains the most common case type, accounting for over half of all reports, says the company.








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