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Google wants to release millions of mosquitoes

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Google wants to release millions of mosquitoes

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I know what you are thinking. Why on earth would Google want to release millions of mosquitoes? That was my first reaction too.

Usually, when we hear “Google” and “bugs” in the same sentence, we think about software. This time, the bugs are real.

Google’s Debug project is asking federal regulators for permission to release sterile male mosquitoes in New Jersey, California and Florida. The goal is to reduce mosquito populations that can spread disease.

Now the big question is whether this is a smart new way to fight mosquito-borne disease, or a tech-backed experiment that needs much more public scrutiny.

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Google Debug project workers. (Courtesy: Google Debug Project)

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How Google’s mosquito plan is supposed to work

Google’s Debug project says it is using science, automation and engineering to fight disease-carrying mosquitoes. The idea comes from a method called the sterile insect technique.

Here is the basic version. Scientists raise male mosquitoes that cannot produce viable offspring. Then they release those males into the wild. When the sterile males mate with wild females, the eggs do not hatch. Over time, the local mosquito population can shrink.

That part is important. Male mosquitoes do not bite. Female mosquitoes are the ones that bite and can spread disease. So Google isn’t trying to release more biting mosquitoes into neighborhoods. It is trying to release males that can help stop future generations from hatching.

Why Google wants to release mosquitoes

Google’s Debug project sees mosquito control as a public-health and technology challenge. The team says it wants to use engineering, automation and AI tools to reduce disease-carrying mosquito populations.

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The idea is to stop “bad bugs” with “good bugs.” That may sound strange, but the science behind it has been studied for decades.

Sterile insect releases have been used against other pests, including fruit flies, screwworms and codling moths. Mosquitoes are harder. They are fragile, difficult to raise at a massive scale and challenging to sort by sex. That is where Debug says Google’s technology can help.

Why sorting male mosquitoes matters

Debug says the process starts by raising sterile male mosquitoes. One approach uses Wolbachia, a naturally occurring bacterium found in many insects.

The bacteria can make males incompatible with wild females that do not carry the same Wolbachia strain. When they mate, the eggs fail to develop.

After that, Debug has to separate males from females. This step matters a lot. If the project releases too many females by mistake, the whole idea becomes much harder to trust.

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That is where Google’s tech background comes in. Debug says its team is using sensors, algorithms, automation and monitoring tools to raise, sort, release and track mosquitoes at scale. In other words, this is mosquito control with a Silicon Valley twist.

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Debug Google facilities in Singapore. (Courtesy: Google Debug Project)

Why sterile male mosquitoes could help

Mosquito-borne diseases are a serious global health problem. Some mosquitoes can spread dengue, Zika, yellow fever, chikungunya, West Nile virus and other illnesses.

Traditional mosquito control often depends on pesticides. Those can help, but they can also raise environmental concerns. Mosquitoes can also become harder to control over time.

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That is why sterile male releases interest some researchers. The approach targets a specific mosquito population. It also avoids spraying more chemicals into the environment.

If it works, the local mosquito population drops because fewer eggs hatch. That could mean fewer disease risks in areas where these mosquitoes are a problem.

Why residents are worried about Google mosquitoes

Even with the science behind it, the public concern is easy to understand. Nobody likes the phrase “release millions of mosquitoes.” It sounds like the start of a bad summer, not a public-health project.

Some residents also worry about control. Once living insects are released, people want to know what happens next. They want to know who monitors the program, who pays for follow-up work and what happens if the results are not what scientists expected. Those are fair questions.

There is also a trust issue. A project like this can feel very different when a private tech giant is involved. People may support disease prevention and still feel uneasy about a corporation playing such a large role in local ecosystems.

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The biggest challenge with sterile mosquito releases

The success of this idea depends on precision. Male mosquitoes do not bite. Female mosquitoes do. So the sorting process has to be extremely accurate.

Debug says it is working on technology to separate males from females quickly. That may include sensors, algorithms and engineering systems that spot biological differences between them.

However, this is the part many people will focus on. If the public is told only males will be released, they will want proof. They will also want clear oversight from regulators. When you are dealing with living insects, “close enough” isn’t the most reassuring phrase.

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Images of freshly-enclosed male and female mosquitoes marching in a straight line before they get sex sorted. (Courtesy: Google Debug Project)

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What the EPA is reviewing

The EPA is reviewing Google’s request for an experimental use permit. The filing involves Wolbachia pipientis contained in live adult male mosquitoes.

The purpose is to test whether Debug’s male mosquitoes can mate with wild females and suppress the population.

The EPA will decide whether to approve or deny the request. If it approves the permit, it can also set conditions for how the project must operate.

What Google mosquitoes could mean for you

Even if you do not live in one of the proposed release areas, this is worth watching. If Google’s project works, more communities may look at sterile mosquito releases as another tool against disease. That could be good news in areas dealing with mosquito-borne illnesses.

At the same time, it raises a larger question. How much public-health work should depend on private companies with their own funding, technology and long-term goals? For many people, the science may sound promising. The setup may still feel uncomfortable. Both reactions can be true.

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Kurt’s key takeaways

Google releasing mosquitoes may sound strange, but the goal is real public health. Debug wants to use sterile male mosquitoes to cut down populations that can spread disease. There is a reason scientists are interested. Male mosquitoes do not bite, and sterile insect releases have been studied for decades. Still, communities deserve more than a promise that everything will go as planned. They need clear answers about monitoring, safeguards, costs and what happens if the project fails. Fighting mosquito-borne disease is important. But once living insects are released into the wild, trust and oversight have to come first.

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Sealed Super Mario Bros. sells for a record $3 million

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Sealed Super Mario Bros. sells for a record  million

A copy of Super Mario Bros., still in the box and sealed with its original sticker, just sold at Heritage Auctions for $3 million. That absolutely crushes the previous record of $2 million, also for a copy of Super Mario Bros., in 2021. That sale also came hot on the heels of a controversial auction of Super Mario 64 for $1.56 million.

Part of what drove the price of this particular copy so high is that, according to Heritage Auctions, instead of shrink wrap, this 19895 second run was sealed with a glossy sticker, which was discontinued shortly after. The site claims it’s the earliest known sealed copy of the game in existence. It’s also graded at 9.6 A++ by Professional Sports Authenticator.

The price of vintage gaming collectibles has been skyrocketing over the last few years. It was only in July of 2020 that Heritage Auctions set the record for the highest price paid for a game at auction, again, with a copy of Super Mario Bros., for $114,000. Six years later, that seems like an absolute bargain.

If the winner of the auction decides to do the unthinkable and break the seal on the game, Heritage Auctions is throwing in an NES console.

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Beware of hackers showing up pretending to be IT

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Beware of hackers showing up pretending to be IT

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A person walks into an office, says they are from IT and asks to sit at a computer for a quick fix. Most employees would feel relieved. Finally, someone came to solve the tech problem. That trust is exactly what one cybercrime group appears to be counting on.

The FBI is warning that a group called the Silent Ransom Group is targeting U.S. businesses, especially law firms, by pretending to be IT support. The group first tries to talk employees into installing remote access software. When that fails, the scam can move from the phone to the front door.

That is where things get especially brazen. According to the FBI, these impostors may show up in person with flash drives, external hard drives and other equipment. Once they sit at a workstation, they can copy sensitive files, gain more access and leave behind malware.

Then they walk away. The company may not hear from them again until the ransom demand arrives.

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A fake IT support visit can look routine until sensitive files are copied from a company computer. (Jens Schlueter/Getty Images)

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How the fake IT support scam works

The Silent Ransom Group, also known as Luna Moth, Chatty Spider and UNC3753, uses phone calls, phishing and old-fashioned nerve. The scam often starts with a call. The person on the phone pretends to be IT support and tries to convince the employee to install remote desktop software. That software gives the attacker access to the computer.

If the employee refuses or the plan fails, the attacker may send someone to the office. That person then poses as tech support. They may say they need to troubleshoot a problem, update a system or check a device. Once seated at the computer, they insert a USB drive or external hard drive. From there, they can pull off files and quietly increase their access.

The FBI says the group uses stolen data to extort victims. They threaten to sell the files or post them online. They may also call employees or clients to pressure the company into paying. That adds a personal layer to the attack. It also turns stolen files into a public shaming campaign.

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Why fake IT support scams target law firms

Law firms hold some of the most sensitive information a business can store. That can include client records, lawsuits, contracts, financial details and private negotiations. For criminals, that information has value even without encrypting a single computer.

This group appears to focus on stealing data first. Then it uses embarrassment, legal pressure and client panic as leverage. That makes law firms an attractive target.

However, the warning should concern any business that handles sensitive records. Medical offices, financial firms, insurance companies and small businesses can face similar risks. A fake IT worker does not need a huge hacking setup if someone lets them sit down at a computer.

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Hackers may show up with flash drives or external hard drives while pretending to fix a technical problem. (Maxim Konankov/NurPhoto)

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Why fake IT visits can fool employees

Most people picture hackers hiding behind screens in another country. This warning flips that idea. Here, the threat may arrive with a badge, a laptop bag and a calm voice.

That makes the scam easy to miss. A receptionist may think the person has an appointment. An employee may assume someone else approved the visit. A busy manager may wave them through because the person sounds confident. That is the trick.

The attacker takes advantage of workplace habits. People want to be helpful. They want broken tech fixed. They also may not want to challenge someone who appears to know what they are doing. However, politeness can give a criminal the opening they need.

Warning signs of a fake IT support scam

A surprise IT visit should raise questions. Be careful if someone shows up without a scheduled ticket, refuses to name who sent them or asks to use a computer without supervision. Also, watch for anyone who brings their own flash drive or external drive.

Another red flag is urgency. Scammers often rush people so they skip normal checks. They may say the issue needs immediate attention. They may claim a security update failed. They may say your machine has a problem that could affect the whole office. That pressure is the point. Slow the situation down before anyone gets access.

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FBI WARNS ABOUT NEW EXTORTION SCAM TARGETING SENSITIVE DATA

The FBI says businesses should verify every surprise IT visit before anyone gets access to a workstation. (Kurt “CyberGuy” Knutsson)

Ways to stay safe from fake IT support scams

The good news is that a few simple habits can make it much harder for a fake IT worker to get past the front desk, sit at a computer or walk out with sensitive files.

1) Verify every IT visit before giving access

Never let someone sit at a computer because they sound official. Call your company’s known IT number. Do not use a number the visitor gives you. Confirm the person’s name, reason for visit and ticket number. If your business uses outside tech support, keep an approved vendor list at the front desk. Staff should know who can enter and who needs management approval.

2) Require visible approval for outside support

Create a simple rule. No outside technician gets workstation access without approval from a manager or IT lead. That approval should happen through a known channel. A quick verbal claim should never be enough. This protects employees, too. It gives them permission to pause a suspicious situation without feeling rude.

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3) Lock down USB drives and external storage

Businesses should restrict USB access where possible. If employees do not need external drives for daily work, block them. If they do need them, limit access to approved devices. Attackers love removable storage because it can move data fast. That small device can carry out client files, payroll records or legal documents in minutes.

4) Train employees to challenge surprise tech support

Security training should include in-person scams, not only phishing emails. Employees need to know that a friendly visitor can still be dangerous. They should feel comfortable saying, “I need to verify this first.” That one sentence can stop an attack.

5) Watch for unusual remote access tools

The FBI says SRG often tries to get victims to install remote desktop management tools. Your IT team should monitor for new remote access software. They should also review alerts when those tools appear on computers that should not have them. Legitimate tools can become dangerous when criminals use them.

6) Limit access to sensitive files

Employees should only access files they need for their role. That way, if one computer gets compromised, the attacker gets less data. Strong access controls can reduce the damage from a stolen laptop session or a fake IT visit.

7) Use strong logging and endpoint monitoring

Businesses should track device connections, file transfers and privilege changes. This can help spot suspicious activity after an unauthorized visit. It can also give investigators a clearer timeline if data leaves the network.

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8) Have a front desk security process

A receptionist or office manager should have a written checklist for unexpected visitors. That checklist can include photo ID, company name, ticket number and approved contact. Visitors should never wander through an office alone. A fake IT worker counts on confusion. A checklist creates friction.

9) Report suspicious IT impersonation attempts

If someone shows up pretending to be IT support, report it right away to your manager, your IT team and local law enforcement if needed. Businesses can also report cybercrime tips to the FBI’s Internet Crime Complaint Center at IC3.gov. Even if the person leaves before getting access, the attempt still counts. It may help investigators connect the visit to a larger campaign.

10) Use strong security software on every computer

Install trusted security software on office computers to help detect malware, ransomware and other threats if someone gets access to a machine. For example, strong antivirus software provides real-time protection against malware, spyware, ransomware and other online threats on a PC or Mac. Still, software should support your visitor checks, USB controls and employee training, rather than replace them. Get my picks for the best 2026 antivirus protection winners for your Windows, Mac, Android & iOS devices at Cyberguy.com.

Kurt’s key takeaways

The unsettling part of this FBI warning is how normal the attack looks. No dramatic break-in. No Hollywood-style hacking screen. Just someone pretending to help. That is why this scam can work. It blends into a normal workday. It uses trust, speed and workplace pressure to get past defenses. So the next time someone says they are from IT, pause before handing over your keyboard.

Would you challenge a surprise tech support visit at work, or would you assume someone else already approved it? Let us know by writing to us at Cyberguy.com.

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Valve just imported 13 tons of VR headsets in one day

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Valve just imported 13 tons of VR headsets in one day

On June 10th, the German container ship Posen docked in Los Angeles after a two-week voyage from Shanghai. As Valve watcher Brad Lynch notes, it was almost certainly carrying the first mass production shipments of the Steam Frame, Valve’s new gaming headset.

Import records show that Valve’s distribution partner Ceva offloaded nearly 32 metric tons of “Virtual Reality Devices” on Valve’s behalf — or roughly 13 tons of actual product, after you subtract the roughly 3,700 kilogram weight of five 40-foot shipping containers.

Speaking of the Steam Machine, Valve’s stockpile may now have grown to 141 metric tons, as that’s roughly how much “Game Consoles” product has arrived in 12,600kg containers since April 23rd.

And it looks like Valve probably received three shipments of Steam Deck handhelds in May, two on May 18th and one on May 30th, judging by how those containers had the higher gross weight of 14,500kg. That’s generally how heavy Valve’s “Game Console” containers were before the Steam Machine was announced.

13 tons isn’t actually a lot of VR headsets, of course, but perhaps more of them fit into a container than the Steam Machine console. They each weigh 654g (roughly 1.44lb) with a pair of wand controllers; back-of-the-napkin math suggests we’re probably talking about fewer than 20,000 units right now.

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There might not be that many Steam Machines in the US yet, either: 141 metric tons could easily be fewer than 50,000 units at their higher 2.6kg weight per console, not counting any controllers or cables.

Valve confirmed days ago that both the Steam Machine and Steam Frame will launch this summer, and has signaled that it had to rethink prices because of RAMageddon. Even if they’re pricey, though, they may sell out quickly.

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