
OpenAI CEO Sam Altman said Tuesday Facebook parent Meta is attempting to woo his employees with limited success.

According to Ember monitoring, the Bybit hacker tried to unpledge 15,000 cmETH 1 hour ago, but was returned by the cmETH withdrawal contract. The hacker then authorized the cmETH transaction on the DODO platform, but failed to complete the transaction due to lack of liquidity. The analysis believes that this part of the asset is expected to be intercepted. In addition to 15,000 cmETH, Bybit's stolen ETH was 499,000 (worth about $1.37 billion), which were scattered among 51 addresses by hackers.
South Korean police are expected to try again on Wednesday to execute the arrest warrant against Yoon, according to Yonhap.
Senior South Korean government officials who tried to arrest President Yoon Seok-hyuk faced off and physically clashed with guards at the presidential residence today (January 3). The arresting officers have passed through the main entrance of the official residence, but have not yet entered the building where Yoon Seok-hyuk is located. (Kim Ten)
On December 28th, Nick Timilaus, a famous reporter for the Wall Street Journal who is known as the "Federal Reserve's mouthpiece", recently published an article saying that the Federal Reserve is trying to re-evaluate the impact of the new Trump administration on the US economy and inflation. According to people familiar with the matter, Federal Reserve Chairperson Powell is very dissatisfied with the public remarks of some Federal Reserve officials because they more directly link the Fed's poli...
The South Korean martial law army tried to break into the parliament and arrest the lawmakers who attended the meeting. (CCTV News)
The U.S. Supreme Court has rejected a case by META-owned Facebook seeking to avoid shareholder securities fraud lawsuits.
According to Scam Sniffer, the malicious software "EdtiProAI" attempts to target potential victims with X ads, and if users install the software by mistake, the wallet private key will be at risk.
FTX, which is in the midst of a bankruptcy reorganization, filed a lawsuit seeking to recover at least $11.40 million from the Crypto.com. The money was allegedly held in a Crypto.com account linked to FTX's sister company, Alameda Research. According to the lawsuit documents, the account was registered in the name of Alameda employee Ka Yu Tin, aka Nicole Tin. FTX said the practice was routine for Alameda to disguise its trading activities. FTX claims Alameda actually controlled and funded the ...