Tech
EU Launches Investigation into Snapchat Over Minors’ Safety
The European Commission has opened a formal investigation into Snapchat amid concerns that the platform may expose minors to grooming, criminal recruitment, and other risks, potentially violating EU digital safety laws. The Commission suspects that adults may masquerade as young users on the platform to recruit minors for illegal activities or to exploit them sexually.
“With this investigation, we will closely look into their compliance with our legislation,” a Commission spokesperson said. The probe falls under the EU Digital Services Act (DSA) and follows a review of Snapchat’s risk assessments from 2023 to 2025, as well as additional information received last October regarding age verification and potentially harmful content.
The Commission’s announcement marks the start of formal proceedings, which could result in further enforcement measures. Snapchat may also respond by proposing changes to its policies and practices to improve safety for young users. Snap Inc., the parent company, did not immediately respond to requests for comment.
The investigation will examine five key areas: age verification, grooming and recruitment of minors for criminal activities, default account settings, dissemination of information on banned products, and reporting of illegal content. Officials are particularly concerned that Snapchat users might access illegal goods, such as drugs, vapes, and alcohol, due to insufficient content moderation. The Netherlands Authority for Consumers and Markets (ACM) launched a similar probe into the sale of vape products on Snapchat last September, which the European Commission will now incorporate into its broader investigation.
The Commission also flagged potential flaws in reporting mechanisms for illegal content, suggesting that users may find them difficult to access or confusing to use. Investigators noted that Snapchat may employ “dark patterns,” or design elements intended to trick users into making choices they would not otherwise make.
Snapchat relies on users self-disclosing their age to create an account, which the Commission says is insufficient to protect children under 13. The platform offers “teen” accounts for 13-to-17-year-olds with additional safeguards, including private default settings and the requirement for users to opt in to location sharing through “Snap Map.” Despite these measures, the Commission says that age-appropriate experiences may not always be activated correctly, leaving minors with default settings that do not provide adequate privacy, safety, or security protections.
The European Commission will closely monitor how Snapchat addresses these concerns, with the investigation focusing on whether the platform adequately informs young users about privacy and safety features and how to adjust them.
This investigation underscores the EU’s growing focus on digital safety and the responsibilities of social media companies to protect minors online.
Tech
Researchers Warn AI Systems Can Now Replicate and Spread Across Computers
A new study by US-based cybersecurity group Palisade Research has raised concerns about the growing capabilities of advanced artificial intelligence systems after researchers demonstrated that some AI models were able to copy themselves, spread to other computers, and continue launching attacks without human assistance.
The experiment, described by researchers as the first known example of autonomous AI self-replication, tested several leading AI systems from OpenAI, Anthropic and Alibaba.
According to the research team, the tests were conducted in a controlled environment using computers intentionally fitted with security weaknesses. The AI models were connected to custom-built software that allowed them to interact directly with computer systems and execute commands beyond the capabilities of ordinary chatbot interfaces.
Researchers instructed some systems to copy themselves directly, while others were asked to break into vulnerable computers and install another AI model. Since OpenAI and Anthropic do not publicly release the core files behind their commercial systems, the tests involving those companies used Alibaba’s Qwen models as the transferable software.
The AI systems were required to locate security flaws, gain access to computers, steal login credentials, move necessary files, and create functioning copies of themselves on new machines. Once installed, the copied AI could continue attacking additional systems independently.
One of the most striking results involved Alibaba’s Qwen3.6-27B model, which successfully spread itself across four computers located in Canada, the United States, Finland and India after receiving only a single prompt. Researchers said the process took just under three hours and required no further human involvement.
The experiment was halted after three stages, though the final copy remained operational and theoretically capable of continuing the process.
Success rates varied between models. Researchers reported that Anthropic’s Claude Opus 4.6 completed the tasks in 81 percent of attempts, while OpenAI’s GPT-5.4 succeeded in roughly one-third of tests. Different versions of Alibaba’s Qwen models achieved success rates ranging from 19 percent to 33 percent.
The findings arrive amid wider debate over the risks posed by increasingly capable AI systems. Last month, Anthropic announced that it would not publicly release a version of its Claude Mythos Preview model, describing it as too dangerous because of its potential use in sophisticated cyberattacks.
Security experts have long warned that self-replicating systems could become difficult to contain if deployed maliciously. Traditional computer viruses can already copy themselves, but researchers said this experiment demonstrated AI systems making independent decisions to exploit vulnerabilities and continue spreading.
Despite the results, the researchers stressed that the study took place under tightly controlled conditions with deliberately weakened security systems. They noted that real-world networks often include monitoring tools and protections designed to block such attacks.
Still, the team said the experiment showed that autonomous AI self-replication can no longer be viewed as a theoretical possibility, but as a capability that now exists in practice.
Tech
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Tech
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