technologyconservative
Tech and Security Shifts: What Businesses and Users Need to Watch
United States of America, USASunday, June 7, 2026
Security risks are also spreading beyond big tech. Cryptocurrency is funding a new wave of peptide labs in China, some of which previously produced illegal drugs. What started as a shadow market for supplements has grown into a $100 million industry. Researchers also uncovered a sneaky browser attack called FROST, which can guess what apps or tabs you're using just by measuring how long it takes your device to read a small file. No one knows if it’s being used yet—but when AI finds new ways to spy, it’s only a matter of time.
And then there are the humans behind the screens. Bill Pulte, a housing regulator with a history of targeting political opponents through criminal referrals, has been tapped as acting intelligence chief—raising concerns about how surveillance powers might be used. While his role is temporary, it shows how easily security agencies can shift from defense to offense with the right tools. Even GPS signals, which most people take for granted, hide secrets. A recent study revealed that satellites have been broadcasting coded messages for years, likely part of a military encryption system. The discovery proves that what we see as random could actually be a carefully hidden network—and we might never know until someone digs deeper.
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