Meta rolls out new features for scam protection

Meta announced new features today aimed at cracking down on scams perpetrated via its platforms. First, Meta is launching AI tools for identifying impersonator of brands and celebrities, as well as for detecting deceptive links, which should help it to quickly take down frauds. Second, it is adding new alerts to caution against interacting with a potentially fraudulent account. Facebook will roll out alerts for suspicious friend requests, WhatsApp is getting warnings for device linking requests, and Messenger will also issue warnings if an account seems suspect.

Finally, Meta is also continuing to expand its processes for advertiser verification. The company said it aims to have verified advertisers account for 90 percent of its ads revenue by the end of the year, up from the current share of 70 percent. Last year, Meta estimated that marketing for scams and banned products could have been responsible for 10 percent of its 2024 revenue. 

The social media company has been ramping up its actions against scams, particularly those known as celeb bait. Last month, it sued three entities from Brazil and China that were behind scams that leveraged images and deepfakes of popular people to promote dubious products and investment schemes. Meta said today that over the course of 2025, it removed 159 million scam ads as well as 10.9 million Facebook and Instagram accounts tied to criminal scam centers.

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/social-media/meta-rolls-out-new-features-for-scam-protection-110000173.html?src=rss

Is This the Ultimate Mac Monitor? Apple Studio Display XDR

Is This the Ultimate Mac Monitor? Apple Studio Display XDR Rear angle showing Thunderbolt 5 ports and a cable layout used for multi-display daisy-chaining with a MacBook Pro.

The Apple Studio Display XDR establishes itself as a standout in the realm of high-performance monitors, seamlessly blending advanced technology with a refined design. Tailored for creative professionals and discerning users, this 27-inch 5K mini-LED display delivers exceptional brightness, contrast, and functionality. Positioned as a more accessible alternative to the Pro Display XDR, it integrates […]

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Samsung Galaxy S26 Ultra Emulation & Gaming Review

Samsung Galaxy S26 Ultra Emulation & Gaming Review Dolphin emulator running a GameCube title at 4x resolution with minor visual glitches on the S26 Ultra.

The Samsung Galaxy S26 Ultra has emerged as a standout device for mobile gaming and emulation, thanks to its Snapdragon 8 Elite Gen 5 chipset and advanced gaming features. In a recent breakdown by ETA Prime, the device’s capabilities were put to the test, showcasing its ability to handle demanding tasks like PS2 emulation at […]

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Alessi Just Made a Moka Pot That Looks Like a Giant Screw

If you’ve ever watched someone twist the top half of a moka pot onto its base, you already understand the Vite. You just didn’t know it yet. That twisting motion, the one you do without thinking every morning, the mechanical ritual of threading metal against metal until it locks into place: that’s the entire design concept, made physical. Philippe Malouin took the gesture and turned it into the object itself, which is the kind of move that seems so simple you wonder why it took this long for someone to try it.

Alessi has just unveiled its latest moka pot, designed by Anglo-Canadian designer Philippe Malouin, and the concept is so obvious in hindsight that it’s almost frustrating nobody did it sooner. The pot is shaped like a screw. The boiler, which is the bottom chamber you fill with water, is wrapped in a pronounced helical thread that mirrors the exact twisting gesture you use to seal the two halves together. Form literally follows function, except here the form is the function, made visible and tactile and almost theatrical.

Designer: Philippe Malouin for Alessi

What makes the design work is how committed it is to the concept. Malouin didn’t soften the industrial reference or add decorative elements to make it friendlier. The thread is deep and aggressive, giving the aluminum body a tactile grip that feels engineered rather than styled. The upper chamber sits on top like a bolt head, clean and geometric, while a tapered pedestal at the base anchors the whole composition. That pedestal isn’t just aesthetic, it’s functional, designed to work on both gas flames and induction cooktops. Every element serves the central idea without compromise.

The construction is straightforward in the way good tools are straightforward. The helical form creates natural contours that make the pot easier to hold and twist, which means the design logic actually improves usability rather than sacrificing it for concept. The thread grooves catch light in a way that makes the object more visually dynamic depending on the angle, and the repetition of the spiral gives it a kinetic quality even when it’s sitting still on a counter.

Malouin has described his research process as drawing from “scrapyard works,” recovering discarded metal parts and recombining them into something new. That approach is visible here. The Vite looks like it was pulled from a bin of machine components and repurposed, which gives it an honesty that a lot of contemporary design lacks. It doesn’t try to hide what it is or smooth over its mechanical origins. The aluminum stays raw and utilitarian, the proportions stay true to hardware logic, and the result is something that feels more like a precision instrument than a kitchen accessory.

The name reinforces the concept. “Vite” is Italian for screw, but it also means “quickly” or “fast,” which layers in a reference to espresso culture and the speed of the brewing ritual. Whether that double meaning was intentional or accidental, it works. Good design tends to accumulate meaning like that, where the formal decisions align with the cultural context in ways that feel inevitable once you notice them.

What I find most compelling is how the design makes you pay attention to something you normally ignore. Every time you screw a moka pot shut, you’re performing the exact motion the Vite is built around, but the traditional design doesn’t acknowledge it. Malouin’s version does. It takes an unconscious gesture and makes it conscious, turns routine into ritual, and does it without adding complexity or decoration. The form just clarifies what was always there.

That clarity is what separates this from novelty design. The screw isn’t a gimmick. It’s the logic of the object, made legible. The thread pattern serves the function, the industrial aesthetic serves the origin, and the overall composition serves the experience of using it. Everything aligns, which is harder to achieve than it looks.

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Phone 17e First Look: 256GB and MagSafe Make This the Best Budget Buy

Phone 17e First Look: 256GB and MagSafe Make This the Best Budget Buy iPhone 17e

Apple has introduced the iPhone 17e, a new addition to its smartphone lineup that emphasizes a balance between affordability and innovation. Designed to cater to a wide range of users, the iPhone 17e combines the power of the A19 chip, enhanced camera capabilities, and expanded storage options, all while maintaining a competitive price point. Whether […]

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Google Pixel 11 Pro Fold Leaked: Goodbye Camera Bar, Hello Sleek New Design

Google Pixel 11 Pro Fold Leaked: Goodbye Camera Bar, Hello Sleek New Design Google Pixel 11 Pro Fold

The Google Pixel 11 Pro Fold marks Google’s latest venture into the foldable smartphone market, offering a refined evolution of its predecessor. While it doesn’t introduce new changes, it incorporates subtle yet impactful updates designed to enhance usability and maintain its competitive position. CAD-based renders provide an early glimpse of the device, highlighting a design […]

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5 Essential Claude Cowork Tips & Tricks for Clear Workflow Planning

5 Essential Claude Cowork Tips & Tricks for Clear Workflow Planning Zapier connection page showing Claude Co-work access to thousands of apps, with popular services listed in a menu.

Claude Cowork provides a range of capabilities for improving collaboration and organization, but using it effectively starts with a strong foundation. According to Brock Mesarich | AI for Non Techies, beginning with a well-structured Claude MD file is essential. This approach involves defining key elements such as audience, tone and specific rules, making sure clarity […]

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Galaxy Watch 9 vs. Ultra 2: Why Samsung is Splitting Its Chip Strategy

Galaxy Watch 9 vs. Ultra 2: Why Samsung is Splitting Its Chip Strategy Galaxy Watch Ultra 2 render showing a larger case, rugged buttons, and a sporty strap for outdoor use.

Samsung is preparing to elevate its smartwatch lineup with the Galaxy Watch 9 and Galaxy Watch Ultra 2. According to leaks, the company may adopt a new dual-chip strategy, where each model will feature a distinct processor. This approach could redefine how Samsung differentiates its standard and premium smartwatches, offering tailored features to meet the […]

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Why Better AI Models Aren’t the Bottleneck Anymore : AI Business Opportunities

Why Better AI Models Aren’t the Bottleneck Anymore : AI Business Opportunities Kanban-style board showing pilot results, policy updates, and next actions for the next 90-day AI cycle.

Artificial intelligence is reshaping industries, yet many organizations fail to capitalize on its full potential due to a lack of strategic integration. In a recent discussion by Marketing Against the Grain, the focus shifts from the capabilities of advanced AI models like GPT 5.4 to the importance of embedding AI into the core of business […]

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Satechi Just Replaced 4 Travel Accessories With One Folding Stand

Packing a bag for a day of working away from a desk has become its own logistics puzzle. There is the hub for ports, the stand to prop the screen at a usable angle, the card reader for importing photos, and the charging cable to keep everything alive mid-session. Satechi’s OntheGo Foldable Stand Hub takes a direct swing at this by combining all of that into a single unit that folds flat to under 20mm and weighs just 187.5g.

The premise is simple. Unfold the stand, plug the attached 17 cm USB-C cable into a tablet or laptop, and the whole suite of ports is live: HDMI 2.0 output at up to 4K@60Hz, two 10 Gbps data ports (one USB-C, one USB-A), UHS-II SD and microSD slots at up to 312 MB/s, a 3.5mm audio jack, and 100W USB-C Power Delivery passthrough. That last feature delivers up to 85W to the host device, enough to sustain a MacBook Air or iPad Pro under a heavy session without draining the battery.

Designer: Satechi

For photographers working on location, the card slots alone justify the bag space. Slide in a UHS-II SD card fresh from a camera, and the 312 MB/s ceiling means a full card of RAW files clears quickly. Connect a monitor through the HDMI port, and a hotel desk becomes something closer to a proper edit station, with the screen raised to a natural viewing height and footage already importing in the background.

Compatibility covers the expected range: iPad Pro, iPad Air, iPad mini (2021 and later), and recent iPhones. Worth noting: the iPad mini (2021) tops out at 5 Gbps on the data ports due to its own USB spec, not the hub’s. Outside of Apple’s garden, it also supports select Microsoft Surface Pro models and USB-C Android devices, especially ones that support Samsung DeX.

That last point is an important one. A compatible Samsung phone connected to an external monitor through this hub activates DeX mode, turning the phone into a desktop-style interface without needing a laptop at all. That said, you’ll need to hook up an external monitor to actually activate DeX mode.

At $79.99, the OntheGo Foldable Stand Hub sits in a space where stands and hubs are almost always sold separately, each typically running $30 to $60 on their own. What a spec sheet cannot answer is how the folding hinge holds up after months of daily packing and repacking, and whether the fixed 17cm cable length plays nicely with every desk configuration or occasionally creates its own awkward workarounds.

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