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  • See inside the eerie, abandoned Air Force base that spawned conspiracy theories and inspired ‘Stranger Things’

    outside the radar tower
    Outside the radar tower.

    • Camp Hero is a state park in Montauk, the easternmost tip of Long Island, New York.
    • It used to be Montauk Air Force Station, which reportedly inspired Netflix's "Stranger Things."
    • Last summer, I visited the state park and understood why it's the subject of conspiracy theories.

    Fans of "Stranger Things" know that all the interdimensional problems that have befallen our friends in Hawkins, Indiana, are because of the secret government facility known as the Hawkins Lab.

    But did you know that Netflix's "Stranger Things" was originally called "Montauk," named after the real-life New York town that's at the center of multiple conspiracy theories?

    Since its debut in 2016, "Stranger Things" has become a phenomenon, spawning millions of dollars in merch, tie-in novels and comics, a stage adaptation, mobile games, a tabletop game, and more. It's one of Netflix's biggest franchises.

    Camp Hero, formerly known as the Montauk Air Force Station, has been plagued with conspiracy theories since the book "The Montauk Project: Experiments in Time," written by Preston Nichols, was published in 1992. Its unsubstantiated claims included that researchers at the base had repressed the memories of employees who'd been subjected to experiments throughout the '70s and '80s.

    Today, it's possible to visit Camp Hero, which opened to the public as a state park in 2002. As someone who has been to Montauk dozens of times but never to Camp Hero — and as someone going through "Stranger Things" withdrawal as we await a release date for season five — I jumped at the chance to check out the base, which is now abandoned.

    I came away from my visit last summer understanding where the Duffer brothers, who created "Stranger Things," got their inspiration. Camp Hero would certainly be on my list of the creepiest places I've visited.

    Look inside the park, from its beautiful ocean views to the mysterious 90-foot radar tower that still stands now.

    If you've seen an episode of the Netflix smash-hit "Stranger Things," the creepiness of Hawkins Lab has probably stuck with you.
    hawkins lab stranger things
    The inside of the mysterious and sinister Hawkins Lab in "Stranger Things."

    "Stranger Things," which dropped its first season in July 2016 and has become a pop-culture juggernaut in the years since, began as the story of a group of pre-teens who, after one of their best friends goes missing, become tangled in a dangerous web of government conspiracies, alternate dimensions, the Cold War, and more.

    One of the show's breakout characters is Eleven (played by Millie Bobby Brown), a young girl born with telekinesis. Immediately after she was born, she was abducted by a scientist whom she calls Papa (Matthew Modine) and taken to Hawkins Lab, where she and other children were experimented on.

    The upcoming fifth season will also be its last.

    The show's creators, the Duffer brothers, were inspired by a real-life government base in Montauk, New York, called Camp Hero.
    Creators and Executive Producers Ross Duffer and Matt Duffer attend the premiere of "Stranger Things" at Mack Sennett Studios on July 11, 2016 in Los Angeles, California
    Ross Duffer and Matt Duffer in 2016.

    In 2016, Matt and Ross Duffer confirmed to The Hollywood Reporter that "Stranger Things" was originally sold as "Montauk" before they decided to switch the name and the location to the fictional town of Hawkins, Indiana.

    "We liked Montauk, because we liked the coastal setting," Matt Duffer said, adding that Montauk is the basis for Amity Island, the fictional location of "Jaws," which is one of their favorite movies.

    But the setting changed when they realized "it was really going to be impossible to shoot in or around Long Island in the wintertime," Matt Duffer continued.

    A filmmaker, Charlie Kessler, sued the brothers in 2018, claiming they stole the idea of "Stranger Things" from his script "The Montauk Project," Thrillist reported. The Hollywood Reporter wrote that the Duffers denied his claims, and Kessler dropped the lawsuit in 2019.

    The base shut down in 1982 and reopened to the public as Camp Hero State Park in 2002.
    camp hero sign
    A sign welcoming visitors to Camp Hero.

    According to signs in the park outlining Camp Hero's history, the US Army commissioned Camp Hero in May 1942 — five months after the US joined World War II in December 1941 — to defend against German submarines and boats.

    The Army deactivated the base in 1947 and turned it over to the US Air Force in 1951, which remained there until 1982.

    The New York Times reported following a 2006 visit that Camp Hero, named for Major General Andrew Hero Jr. — who served as the chief of coast artillery from 1926 to 1930, according to Arlington National Cemetery — opened to the public in 2002.

    Naturally, I had to check it out, which I did in summer 2023.
    me in front of the radar tower
    Outside the radar tower.

    As a huge fan of "Stranger Things" with a mild interest in secret governmental conspiracy theories, I figured I'd drive out east and laugh with my mom (who made the trek with me) about the wildest things we'd learn about Camp Hero.

    Instead, I came away feeling like "Stranger Things" got the atmosphere of this place exactly right.

    Camp Hero is on the easternmost tip of Long Island, New York.
    montauk on long island
    New York City, Long Island, and Montauk.

    Montauk is commonly known as The End. It's the last town on Long Island, making it the perfect spot for an Army base scanning the oceans for submarines hiding in the depths below.

    The park is 123 miles outside New York City. I'm from a town on Long Island that's 99 miles west of Montauk, so it took me around two hours to drive there.
    another camp hero sign
    Signs led the way to Camp Hero.

    When there's no traffic, it can be a fun drive. You pass through picturesque towns that are worth a stop, like Amagansett, East Hampton, Southampton, Wainscott, and more.

    It's located past the town center of Montauk, a favorite of celebrities and locals.
    montauk downtown area
    A store in Montauk's bustling center.

    Curbed reported that celebrities including Julianne Moore, Ralph Lauren, and Robert De Niro have owned real estate in the town.

    I grew up on Long Island and have been to Montauk dozens of times, but I've never really explored Camp Hero before.

    When you turn off the highway to drive into the park, you have a good view of the Montauk Lighthouse, which is a Long Island landmark and part of the adjacent Montauk Point State Park.
    camp hero entrance
    The lighthouse and the sign for Camp Hero.

    Montauk Lighthouse, according to the Montauk Historical Society, was the first lighthouse to be built in New York after George Washington commissioned it in 1792.

    It's also the fourth-oldest working lighthouse in the US and just one of 12 lighthouses to be named a National Historic Landmark.

    There are plenty of signs, so you won't get lost on your way in. The park is open every day from sunrise to sunset and entry costs $8.
    camp hero sign
    Another sign.

    Or, if you're a New York resident with an Empire Pass like I am, it's free.

    According to New York State's Parks Department, the Empire Pass "permits unlimited vehicle access to most facilities operated by the New York State Office of Parks, Recreation and Historic Preservation and the New York State Department of Environmental Conservation."

    Essentially, it gets you into most New York state parks for free. A card costs $80 per year (or $72 a year for a digital card), or you can purchase a lifetime pass for $750 (or $742 for a digital card). Three-season and five-season passes are also available, as shown on the parks' website.

    As my family are big fans of Jones Beach, another state park, we've had an Empire Pass for as long as I can remember.

    When you pull in, you're greeted with a map of the park, which covers 754 acres of land.
    a map of the park
    A map of the park.

    I was surprised to learn that a decent chunk of land is off-limits to visitors and is a wildlife and plant sanctuary.

    First, you see some of Montauk's famous bluffs and a view of the Atlantic Ocean.
    the bluffs
    One of the first areas you see in Camp Hero.

    There are a few parks in the Montauk area that offer a good view of the bluffs, including Shadmoor State Park, Montauk Point State Park, and Ditch Plains Beach.

    Just to the right of the water is one of the many trails throughout the park — along with a caution sign warning people to stay away from the cliffs.
    one of the trails
    A caution sign next to a trail.

    This wouldn't be the last warning sign I'd see that day.

    Plenty of signs about the steep edges of the bluffs were posted throughout the park. Erosion is also a huge problem on Long Island's beaches, so I stayed as far back as possible.
    stay back from the cliffs
    Another caution sign.

    The Patch reported that the town of East Hampton, which includes Montauk, was given a $350,000 federal grant to address the erosion issues along the coastline in December 2022.

    Officials told The Patch that, according to measurements by the US Army Corps of Engineers, Montauk's shoreline "eroded more than 44 feet inland between 2000 and 2012."

    In the years since the erosion has only continued — so I heeded the sign's warnings.

    I also spotted the base's defunct radar tower, which is at the center of many conspiracy theories about the camp — more about those later. We decided to head there.
    the radar tower in the distance
    The radar tower from a distance.

    The radar tower looms over Camp Hero. I knew I needed to make my way over there to get a good look.

    One of the first remnants of the base we saw was this concrete battery, built for artillery when the US Army commissioned the base in the '40s.
    a weird concrete structure
    One of the batteries.

    According to signs in the park, the Army built batteries throughout the base. Batteries 112 and 113, which are both still standing, contained two 16-inch guns each. The artillery was removed in 1947.

    We eventually reached a parking lot adjacent to the radar tower, but we couldn't get too close.
    do not enter
    The radar tower.

    Even from a distance, you can see just how big it is.

    The 90-foot tower and its 40-foot-wide dish are visible throughout the park, and they gave me the eerie feeling I was being watched. But being up close was somehow even more unsettling.
    outside the radar tower
    The radar tower.

    According to signs in the park, the "giant" radar, specifically an AN/FPS-35, was built in 1960, and it remained operational until 1980.

    Its radar dish was built to detect an attack on the US. As The New York Times reported in 2006, it was once "able to detect airborne objects more than 200 miles from shore."

    The tower was built when the Air Force took over the base in the 1950s. At the peak of the Cold War, multiple towers were located throughout the eastern US, but now, the Montauk tower is the only one left.
    radar tower and abandoned structure
    The dish behind an abandoned building.

    The radar tower is central to many of the conspiracy theories surrounding Camp Hero.

    Filmmaker Christopher Garetano, who directed a docudrama about Camp Hero called "Montauk Chronicles" in 2014, spoke about the radar dish during a History Channel documentary called "The Dark Files."

    "Every 12 seconds the radar tower would rotate and there would be animals freaking out and people getting headaches and bad dreams," says Garetano in "The Dark Files," claiming "people's electronic equipment would go haywire" when the dish rotated.

    "I don't want to add fuel to the fire because I don't believe all the zombie stuff," one resident of 40 years told The New York Post in 2020. "But the impact that tower had on the town was real. I don't know if it affected our thoughts like some people say, but it was a force."

    There seemed to be unofficial trails along the fence protecting the tower, but a sign warning about the dangers of ticks put me off getting any closer.
    a sign warning about ticks
    Ticks everywhere.

    Ticks are frequent carriers of Lyme disease. That was more than enough to keep me away from any heavily wooded areas.

    According to the map and a sign, one road led to another overlook of the bluffs. But we weren't heartened by this writing on the path that declared we were in a "hazardous area."
    a sign on the ground that says no trespassing hazardous area
    Apparently we were in a hazardous area.

    The New York Times reported in 2006 that visitors to Camp Hero were given pamphlets about what to do in case they spotted an undetonated grenade or other unexploded ammunition — it did use to be an active military base, after all.

    We barely saw anyone else while we explored Camp Hero, but my mom told me she couldn't shake the feeling that people were watching us from the woods. At first, I scoffed, but as the day went on, I started to see what she meant.
    the road path turned into a less paved trail
    An empty path.

    It was spookily silent as we walked through the woods, even though we weren't too far from the beach or a busy highway. I felt like we were in the middle of nowhere.

    We came across another sign pointing to the overlook, so we knew we were headed in the right direction.
    bluff overlook sign
    Another sign pointing us in the right way.

    But as you can see, it looks like we were just about to walk in a heavily wooded forest.

    These woods really reminded me of the woods where Eleven was discovered during the "Stranger Things" pilot episode, and later the place she'd call home.
    then the trail turned into a dirt road
    The woods.

    In the first episode of "Stranger Things," Mike, Lucas, and Dustin search the woods for their friend Will after he goes missing while biking home. The trio are searching on a rainy night when they suddenly come across Eleven, who had just escaped Hawkins Lab.

    At the end of season one, Eleven returns to the woods to escape the Lab's clutches.

    After about a mile, we glimpsed the ocean and a treacherous path that seemed to lead down to the water.
    one of the less marked trails
    A path.

    I've read one too many stories about tourists falling to their deaths while trying to take the perfect selfie. Staying on the flat path was enough for me.

    I was content to sit on this rock and take in the views from a safe distance.
    made it to the bluffs
    The view.

    This rock was helpfully in the perfect place for me to pose for a photo.

    And the views were, admittedly, pretty great.
    the bluffs view
    The bluffs.

    Fishing is one of Camp Hero's biggest draws, and I saw a few fishermen on the beach casting their lines.

    On our walk back to the car, a dog came running out of the woods and scared both of us — but he was just a friendly pet running back to his owner. Safe to say, we were both on edge.
    one of the roads
    The road.

    I didn't even have the presence of mind to take a picture of this dog — that's how you know my mom and I were truly freaked out.

    Our next stop was what was known as "downtown Camp Hero." This building used to be a gymnasium.
    the gymnasium at camp hero
    The gymnasium.

    The sign in front of this roped-off structure explained more about downtown Camp Hero. When the base was built in 1947, 600 men and 37 officers lived in this area and the structures were disguised as a "seaside fishing village," with artificial wood siding and fake windows.

    This structure, the gym, was designed to look like a church. It's the only structure left from the original "downtown" Camp Hero, though other newer buildings are still standing.

    Here's one of the buildings that housed barracks. It's seen better days.
    barracks at camp hero
    The barracks.

    I was half-convinced that someone was just going to pop out of the windows if I got too close.

    The idea we were being watched turned out to be pretty plausible — we came across a doe and her fawn behind one of the buildings.
    deer at camp hero
    Two deer behind one of the buildings.

    We didn't want to scare the deer away, so we kept our distance while exploring the buildings.

    So what exactly happened at Camp Hero? There's the official version, and then there's the conspiracy-theory version, which was popularized after the publication of "The Montauk Project: Experiments in Time" in 1992.
    an abandoned building camp hero
    One of the abandoned buildings.

    According to a comprehensive summary of the conspiracy theories surrounding Camp Hero written by Thrillist in 2016, the events that conspiracy theorists claim happened in Camp Hero were actually pretty similar to what happens in "Stranger Things."

    Author Preston Nichols brought the theories into the mainstream when he published "The Montauk Project: Experiments in Time," which detailed his reported experiences working at Montauk Air Force Station — he claimed he'd recovered repressed memories of his time at the base in the '70s and '80s. 

    Nichols claimed he worked with another former employee on something called the "Montauk Chair," which used electromagnets to strengthen psychic powers. In season four of "Stranger Things," Eleven uses something similar to recover her powers.

    Nichols also claimed scientists at the base used abducted children (like Eleven and her "siblings") to perform experiments on and that some were even sent to an unknown dimension (like the Upside Down).

    Eventually, these experiments were shut down when one of the children summoned an interdimensional monster, Nichols wrote — just like Eleven bringing the Demogorgon to our world.

    A Montauk local once told the New York Post that Camp Hero is "a place that's dominated my life and my nightmares."
    the radar tower
    The radar tower.

    Joe Loffreno told the Post in 2020 that he believes he's one of the children who was abducted and experimented on and who were mentioned in "The Montauk Project."

    "I didn't believe it until two years ago," Loffreno said. "I was hypnotized [by a certified hypnotist] for about 40 minutes and all these memories flooded back. They did a very bad thing to us out there. We were just little kids. They had no right to experiment on us. It was a very dark, very evil thing."

    One theory also posits that a vast network of underground tunnels still connects the structures of Camp Hero.
    another abandoned building camp hero
    Another abandoned structure.

    Garetano, director of "Montauk Chronicles," spoke with Newsday in 2017 about the reported tunnels. He said that when the History Channel was filming for "The Dark Files," they found proof the tunnels existed.

    "Something extraordinary was found, which goes against all the official statements that there isn't anything there," Garetano said. "We didn't get into them, but we have footage of them that was taken by someone else." He added that they saw something on the "electric resistivity imagery tests" that were conducted.

    Another local, Paul Fagan, told the New York Post that he believes a nuclear reactor might've secretly been buried at the base in the '50s, and that any conspiracy theories are actually meant to distract from the reactor's existence.

    The New York Department of Parks, Recreation and Historic Preservation did not respond to a request for comment from Business Insider.

    The Army and the Air Force have never appeared to go on the record about the claims either, and they did not respond to requests for comment from Business Insider.

    According to the signs at Camp Hero, and other historical sources, the base was actually used as a coastal defense site.
    one of the signs at camp hero
    One of the signs at Camp Hero.

    When the Army built the base, it was used to surveil the surrounding area for German submarines, and it was also an antiaircraft artillery training station. At the time, according to the sign, all antiaircraft units in New York were sent to Camp Hero for a few weeks to train.

    The sign also said it was home to other surveillance and height-finding radar that "guarded the New York City area against a surprise attack by Soviet bombers or other missiles."

    The base was also used "extensively" as a live-fire training range until it was shut down in the '80s.

    All I know for sure is that I would never want to walk around Camp Hero alone or at night. There are no lights and very little signage — I could see myself getting hopelessly lost in the woods.
    a path at camp hero
    One of the trails.

    The lack of lights is why the park closes at sunset.

    When we left the park, the road forced us to pass the Montauk Lighthouse, which slightly relieved the tension.
    the lighthouse
    The Montauk Lighthouse.

    Even though it was just a few minutes down the road, the atmosphere was completely different. The parking lot was bustling and I could hear kids laughing as they explored the beach. I felt like I had just been to a completely different world.

    I'd recommend making the drive if you're already in Montauk or the Hamptons.

    I don't think I'll go back to Camp Hero. If I need my conspiracy-theory fix, now I know I can just fire up "Stranger Things" and get the same experience.
    stranger things netflix
    "Stranger Things."

    Do I really believe that there were scientists using abducted children to contact a different dimension at Camp Hero?

    No.

    But I understand the fascination with Camp Hero — the fact that the radar tower and other disguised buildings are still standing decades later, the secluded location, and the idea that there could be secret tunnels underground are all compelling fodder for urban legends.

    Anyone interested in military history or conspiracy theories would learn a lot at Camp Hero, and I'd recommend visiting — during the day, and not on your own.

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  • Jeff Bezos and Amazon execs used Signal to talk business — and the FTC wants to know more

    Jeff Bezos in a suit on top of an Amazon logo
    Amazon founder Jeff Bezos.

    • Amazon execs used messaging app Signal to discuss business matters, the Federal Trade Commission said.
    • The agency wants to know if execs told Amazon staff to delete messages, and when to use Signal.
    • Amazon says the contentions are "baseless" and that it had previously disclosed the use of Signal. 

    Amazon's top executives used the encrypted messaging app Signal to discuss "sensitive business matters," the Federal Trade Commission said in a court filing on Thursday.

    Jeff Bezos and other senior leaders used the app from 2019 to 2022, the FTC said, and made use of its disappearing message feature.

    "Amazon executives deleted many Signal messages during Plaintiffs' pre-Complaint investigation, and Amazon did not instruct employees to preserve Signal messages until over fifteen months after Amazon knew that Plaintiffs' investigation was underway," the FTC claimed in the court filing.

    Some of the Amazon executives named in the filing as Signal users include CEO Andy Jassy, general counsel David Zapolsky, former worldwide consumer chief Jeff Wilke, and former worldwide operations CEO Dave Clark.

    The FTC now wants to know what the execs told employees about when to use Signal and if they instructed them to delete messages.

    The competition watchdog started investigating Amazon in 2019 over its business practices. The FTC says the use of Signal's disappearing messages feature might have destroyed information relevant to its investigation.

    Amazon representative Tim Doyle told Business Insider in a statement that the FTC's "contentions are baseless" as the company had disclosed employees' use of the app years ago.

    He added: "The FTC has a complete picture of Amazon's decision-making in this case including 1.7 million documents from sources like email, internal messaging applications, and laptops (among other sources), and over 100 terabytes of data."

    The court filing includes a copy of an email that Jeff Bezos sent Mike Hopkins, the head of Prime Video and Amazon MGM Studios, in February 2020. The founder said, "Are you on signal messaging app? (Better way to communicate with me.)"

    It also includes a screenshot of a Signal message sent by Carlo Bertucci, Amazon's VP of corporate development. It shows he sent a link in August 2020 to an article about the EU's antitrust investigation into Apple's app store.

    Amazon was hit with an antitrust lawsuit by the FTC and 17 states in September, claiming it was maintaining a monopoly in the marketplace, boosting its prices, and overcharging sellers.

    "Amazon also recognizes that sellers believe 'that it has become more difficult over time to be profitable on Amazon,'" the FTC filing stated. 

    Zapolsky previously told BI that the FTC's suit was "wrong on the facts and the law."

    A court trial for the case has been set for October 2026.

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  • Palmer Luckey’s start-up Anduril just proved it can challenge legacy defense contractors and win

    Palmer Luckey
    Anduril's founder, Palmer Luckey.

    • Anduril has just been selected as one of two vendors for a major US air force contract. 
    • The 7-year-old start-up beat out legacy defense contractors Boeing, Lockheed, and Northrup Grumman. 
    • "Impossible to overstate the importance of this win," tweeted founder Palmer Luckey. 

    Anduril Industries, the defense tech startup run by Palmer Luckey, has just been awarded a major contract by the US Air Force, beating out legacy names like Boeing and Lockheed Martin.

    Anduril, founded in 2017, has been contracted to design and test autonomous fighter jets as part of the Collaborative Combat Aircraft (CCA) program, a core part of the Air Force's efforts to modernize its fleet.

    The Air Force hopes to eventually buy at least 1,000 CAA systems at a cost of $30 million per drone. In the latest fiscal 2025 budget request it requested $557 million for the program and has said it plans to spend almost $9 billion on the initiative by 2029.

    The joint contract will be split between Anduril and General Atomics. The companies will now work on designing, manufacturing, and testing the unmanned aircraft and drones.

    The decision proves just how important autonomy and AI are to the future of US national security strategy.

    The final choice came down to five companies: Anduril, General Atomics, Boeing, Lockheed Martin, and Northrup Grumman. Rather than the stalwart giants of the defense industry with a long track record of building fighter jets, it was seven-year-old Anduril that the Air Force selected.

    "Impossible to overstate the importance of this win," tweeted Luckey following the announcement.

    "Anduril is proving that with the right team and business model, a seven-year-old company can go toe-to-toe with players that have been around for 70+. The real winner? The United States of America."

    https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js

    The US military is increasingly turning to the growing pool of private defense tech start-ups as it races to compete with rivals like China to develop the most advanced military technology.

    "As a country, we are actually making really good strides and moving fast enough," said Luckey in an interview with CNBC. "I'm confident we're going to deliver on budget and on schedule some really sick AI-powered fighter jets," he added.

    The success of Anduril will give hope to other AI players from Silicon Valley hoping to break into the defense sector.

    And the demand is there for them if they can make it: venture capitalists have put more than $100 billion into defense tech since 2021, according to PitchBook data.

    "Anduril is proud to pave the way for other non-traditional defense companies to compete and deliver on large-scale programs," the company wrote in a statement.

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  • Ukraine pulled its Abrams tanks from the front due to Russian drone tactics, US officials say

    A US-provided Abrams
    A US-provided Abrams tank during a training exercise in Poland, on April 12, 2023.

    • Ukraine has removed Abrams tanks from the front lines, Pentagon officials told the Associated Press.
    • They said the tanks are struggling with Russia's drones and attack tactics.
    • Drones proliferating over Ukraine's skies have proved fatal to high-value targets, including tanks.

    Ukraine has withdrawn its US-supplied Abrams tanks from the front lines in the face of Russian drone warfare tactics, two US defense officials told the Associated Press.

    One of the officials, who spoke on condition of anonymity, said swarms of drones flying over Ukraine meant "there isn't open ground that you can just drive across without fear of detection."

    Christopher Grady, the vice chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, confirmed the decision to move the tanks away from the front.

    "When you think about the way the fight has evolved, massed armor in an environment where unmanned aerial systems are ubiquitous can be at risk," Grady told the AP.

    The US agreed to send 31 M1A1 Abrams to Ukraine in January last year, after months of Ukraine asking for advanced weaponry to help counter Russia's invasion.

    Ukraine received the first batch of the tanks in September.

    But it doesn't look like things have gone to plan.

    A Russian reconnaissance drone knocked out an M1 Abrams tank near Avdiivka in eastern Ukraine in February, according to Russian state media.

    Ukraine has lost five Abrams tanks in recent months, The New York Times reported this month, citing an unnamed senior US official. At least three more have been moderately damaged, Markus Reisner, an Austrian military trainer, told the outlet.

    Grady said that Abrams were still important, and that the US and Ukraine would figure out how best to use them, adding: "There is a way to do it."

    He said that the US would work with Ukraine to recalibrate its strategies.

    Drones have been a key feature in the war in Ukraine.

    Ukraine has used them to devastating effect to take out Russian tanks, with drones responsible for two-thirds of Russian tanks taken out, a NATO official told Foreign Policy earlier this month.

    Ukraine has also fallen victim to similar attacks.

    While the Abrams has a track record of defeating Soviet-made armor, it can be exposed to some of the same threats — antitank mines, missiles, artillery, and drones — that have eliminated Ukraine's Leopard and Challenger tanks.

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  • A high school employee was arrested after a deepfake AI recording imitating the school’s principal making racist and antisemitic comments circulated online

    Pikesville high school
    Authorities said that this case is believed to be among the first of its kind in the country.

    • A high school athletics director was arrested after a deepfake of the school's principal was shared online.
    • The deepfake recording imitated Eric Eiswert making racist and antisemitic remarks.
    • Local authorities have called for changes to the law to protect against the misuse of AI technology.

    A Maryland high school athletics director, Dazhon Darien, has been arrested and charged with stalking and theft after an AI deepfake audio recording of the school's principal, which included racist remarks, was shared online.

    The recording, which was posted on social media in January, was circulated widely, and people were led to believe that it was the voice of Eric Eiswert, local police reported.

    Eiswert is the principal of Pikesville High School in the suburbs of Baltimore.

    The deepfake audio included a tirade against black students, which led to Eiswert being inundated by threats, per The New York Times.

    "It's believed Mr. Darien, who was an Athletic Director at Pikesville High School, made the recording to retaliate against Mr. Eiswert who at the time was pursuing an investigation into the potential mishandling of school funds," police said in a statement shared online.

    Darien faces charges of stalking, theft, disruption of school operations, and retaliation against a witness.

    He was released on bail of $5,000 after a court appearance Thursday.

    AI deepfakes are a growing concern

    Police used forensic analysis to determine that the recording was made using AI.

    "Based on an extensive investigation, detectives now have conclusive evidence the recording was not authentic. As part of their investigation, detectives requested a forensic analyst contracted with the FBI to analyze the recording," police said.

    Authorities said in a news conference that the case is believed to be among the first of its kind in the country. And they are calling for changes to the law to bring it up to date with new technology.

    "It will likely require us to examine laws at both the state and federal levels to ensure that this new technology, and those still yet to come, cannot be used in ways that harm individuals and our communities," Baltimore County Executive Johnny Olszewski said.

    Deepfakes are becoming more prevalent as advancements in AI open up new ways for companies and individuals to be exposed to malicious actors.

    There are concerns over the new ways these deepfakes can be manipulated in the workplace. One company in Hong Kong was tricked out of $25 million after scammers targeted an employee using deepfakes of his senior colleagues. The FBI has also warned that more and more people have used the technology to pose as someone else in job interviews.

    There are also fears that AI deepfakes could threaten free and fair elections as it becomes easier for people to spread misinformation.

    Earlier this year, some New Hampshire voters received deepfake calls from what they thought was Joe Biden telling them not to vote in the presidential primary election. The White House wants to "cryptographically verify" videos of Joe Biden so viewers don't mistake real videos for deepfakes.

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  • Kim Jong Un tested a new rocket that could hit Seoul — and may aid Russia against Ukraine

    The Korean People's Army conducts an artillery firing drill in North Korea.
    The Korean People's Army conducts an artillery firing drill in North Korea.

    • Kim Jong Un oversaw tests for a rocket capable of hitting Seoul in South Korea, Bloomberg reported.
    • The rocket could be used to assist Russia in the war against Ukraine.
    • Russia and North Korea have previously denied reports of an arms deal between the two nations.

    North Korea's leader, Kim Jong Un, oversaw the second set of tests for a new rocket that could be used to attack Seoul in South Korea and assist Russia in its war against Ukraine.

    The 240-millimeter multiple rocket launcher has an estimated range of between 40 kilometers and 60 kilometers, or around 25 miles to 37 miles, and is capable of bringing "a strategic change in bolstering up the artillery force of the Korean People's Army," according to a report by the Korean Central News Agency, cited by Bloomberg.

    The weapon is known to have been tested once before, in February of this year, according to the defense and security outlet Army Recognition.

    "North Korea can put the whole Seoul area within its shooting range if these rockets are fired from the front line," Yang Uk, a research fellow at the Asan Institute for Policy Studies in Seoul, told Bloomberg.

    "It could be meaningful in the exports market, say for Russia, and it could be a useful weapon for the war in Ukraine," he said.

    kim jong un putin
    North Korean leader Kim Jong Un and Russian President Vladimir Putin in Vladivostok on April 25, 2019.

    Speaking to NK News in February, Yang said the threat from these rockets is minor compared to the other weapons already obtained by the North Korean military, including KN-23 short-range ballistic missiles and 600mm artillery systems, according to part of the article cited by Army Recognition.

    "North Korea's attempt to present their new system as a guided weapon doesn't significantly raise the level of threat," Yang said.

    Simon Miles, an assistant professor at Duke University's Sanford School of Public Policy, told Business Insider that it would "make perfect sense" for North Korea to develop and sell this type of rocket to the Kremlin, even if the quality isn't as high as others that the country has produced.

    "Quality will be low, but probably 'good enough' for Russia's purposes if they do purchase it, and I bet the price will be attractive," Miles, a historian of the Soviet Union and US-Soviet relations, told BI.

    Russia and North Korea have previously denied an arms deal exists between the two countries. Nonetheless, both US and South Korean officials have accused North Korea of supplying weapons to Russia in exchange for food, economic aid, and military assistance, AP News reported.

    South Korea's defense minister said in March that North Korea had shipped an estimated 7,000 containers containing munitions and other military equipment to Russia since 2023, the outlet added.

    Business Insider reported in October that North Korea was on track to become "one of Russia's most significant foreign arms suppliers."

    US Congress, meanwhile, this week approved a $61 billion aid package to Ukraine after months of pushback. Experts believe future assistance from the US isn't guaranteed as the country gears up for a general election.

    Kelly Grieco, a Stimson Center senior fellow, said at a recent Defense Priorities panel that "everyone involved in this conflict should treat this aid package as though it's the last one and plan accordingly, because that could be."

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  • Step inside Scottsdale, Arizona, where migrating millionaires have created one of the hottest housing markets in the country

    A large gray mansion on a hilltop with mountains in the background
    Big-city millionaires around the US are flocking to Scottsdale, Arizona.

    • Wealthy Americans are moving to Scottsdale, Arizona.
    • Scottsdale has seen a 102% increase in millionaire residents over the past decade.
    • The appeal of Scottsdale lies in its booming business scene and stunning desert landscapes.

    Wealthy residents from big cities across the US are uprooting their lives to start over in Scottsdale, Arizona.

    Scottsdale is one of the country's fastest-growing cities in terms of wealth. There are 243,000 residents — about 14,600 of them are millionaires, and five are billionaires, AZ Central reported in March. According to the USA Wealth Report by Henley & Partners, that's a 102% increase in millionaire residents over the past decade.

    I recently spent 48 hours exploring Scottsdale's top neighborhoods to learn what's drawing so many millionaires to the area. From a booming business scene to breathtaking desert landscapes, here's what I found.

    Welcome to Scottsdale, Arizona, where about one in every 17 residents is a millionaire.
    A curvy street in Scottsdale lined with modern buildings and palm trees. Mountains and blue skies in the background
    Scottsdale, Arizona, is part of the Phoenix metropolitan area.

    Larger lots, bigger homes, and lower taxes aren't the only reasons the wealthy are ditching their big-city lifestyles for Scottsdale. Tech workers, entrepreneurs, and retirees are also moving to the area for business opportunities, pristine golf courses, warm weather, and inspiring landscapes.

    I can describe Scottsdale in two words — luxury desert. From glass office buildings to mansions in the mountains, this place has a wide variety of upscale architecture alongside palm trees and succulents.

    If you can take the heat — it was 90 degrees Fahrenheit when I visited in April — it'd be a stunning place to call home.

    The town has been notorious for its luxury lifestyle for decades.
    An adobe mansion with cacti out front and blue skies in the background in Scottsdale
    A luxury home in North Scottsdale.

    Before visiting Scottsdale, I spoke with real-estate agent Shawn Shackelton. She told me it's been primarily a luxury market since she started selling homes in the area in 2001.

    The median listing price in Scottsdale is $1.1 million, and the most expensive home on the market right now is $54 million, according to Realtor.com.

    "The reality is that Scottsdale has never been a place where people come looking for affordable housing," Shackelton said.

    Shackelton added that most of her buyers pay cash and are entrepreneurs, C-suite executives, medical professionals such as doctors and PAs, and young retirees.

    Scottsdale is just east of Phoenix.
    A map of Arizona with an arrow pointing to Scottsdale
    Scottsdale is on the outskirts of Phoenix, Arizona.

    During my trip, I strolled through South Scottsdale's bustling streets and explored the city's wealthiest areas in North Scottsdale and the nearby Paradise Valley, where sprawling estates dot the mountainous desert landscape.

    South Scottsdale is home to the town's business-booming neighborhoods.
    A modern, glass building with palm trees in front of it
    A modern office building in South Scottsdale.

    When I arrived in Scottsdale around noon, I walked through the downtown area and Biltmore, a neighborhood known as the financial district, according to Shackelton.

    Biltmore felt like a work-centric neighborhood.
    Left: a We Work sign with green grass in the background. Right: Palm trees in front of a modern building with a blue origin sign
    A WeWork and Blue Origin office in a business complex in Biltmore.

    In Biltmore, I spotted modern skyscrapers with mirrored windows reflecting the palm trees that lined the streets. The buildings were home to banks, coworking spaces, and well-known companies like Blue Origin.

    There weren't many pedestrians out and about, but most appeared to be in the middle of their workday. People in business attire bustled by with a briefcase in one hand and a cellphone in the other.

    Although more crowded, I thought the vibe downtown was more relaxed.
    An adobe business building across an intersection on a day with clear blue skies
    An office building in Downtown Scottsdale.

    East of Biltmore, Downtown Scottsdale was another active area with a different feel.

    The architecture was a mix of modern buildings and traditional adobe structures. I saw office buildings for companies like Indeed as well as Western-style shops and restaurants in the historic Old Town area.

    When I visited, there were more pedestrians downtown than in Biltmore, and the crowd seemed to be a mix of locals and tourists.

    These neighborhoods have high-end stores I'd expect to find in a larger city.
    A street under a building called Scottsdale Fashion Square
    The entrance to Fashion Square in Downtown Scottsdale.

    In South Scottsdale, I was surprised to find luxury department stores and independent boutiques similar to what you'd find in New York City, from Neiman Marcus to Saks Fifth Avenue.

    And according to Shackelton, that's part of the draw for residents.

    "Something people love when they come here is that even if they enjoy the outdoor lifestyle, they can still go to fine-dining restaurants and high-end boutique shops," Shackelton said. "If somebody wants to feel like they're still in a walkable, big city, South Scottsdale is where I'd recommend moving to."

    Nearby is Paradise Valley, a separate town that blends into South Scottsdale.
    Millionaire homes on a mountain above a golf course in Paradise Valley, Arizona, on a blue-skyed day
    Estates in Paradise Valley, Arizona.

    We can't talk about Scottsdale without talking about Paradise Valley.

    Known as the "Beverley Hills of Arizona," the town between Phoenix and Scottsdale is home to mostly gated estates along Camelback Mountain and Mummy Mountain.

    As Business Insider previously reported, it's the richest municipality in the state. The median home listing price is $5.5 million, and the most expensive on the market is $75 million, according to Realtor.com.

    Paradise Valley is a hot spot for billionaires and icons, drawing celebrity residents like Stevie Nicks and Muhammad Ali, who died in 2016.
    Boxing: Portrait of former heavyweight champion Muhammad Ali posing while getting his picture taken by photographer Neil Leifer during photo shoot at his home. Paradise Valley, AZ
    Muhammad Ali posing while getting his picture taken by photographer Neil Leifer at his home in Paradise Valley in 2012.

    On my trip, I thought it was easy to see why.

    The isolated, mountainous residential area is just minutes from the businesses, shops, and restaurants in South Scottsdale, giving locals the best of both worlds.

    For business travelers, it's about 20 minutes to Downtown Phoenix and Sky Harbor International Airport.

    North Scottsdale is home to expensive, gated communities far from the city's amenities.
    Homes at the base of a hill with cacti on the hill behind them
    DC Ranch homes in North Scottsdale.

    North Scottsdale has a similar feel to Paradise Valley, with large mansions and mountain views. But it's about 40 minutes away from the businesses, shops, and other amenities in South Scottsdale.

    But one neighborhood, DC Ranch, felt like a private town with anything you might need against a dramatic, desert backdrop.
    A street lined with luxury homes in front of a mountain with blue skies in the background in Scottsdale
    A street in one of the DC Ranch villages.

    During my stay, I got a private tour of DC Ranch — the North Scottsdale neighborhood home to the city's most expensive house on the market right now, priced at $54 million, according to Realtor.com.

    DC Ranch is slightly more affordable than Paradise Valley, with an average listing price of $3.3 million. Shackelton said this is likely because the location isn't as close to the action in South Scottsdale and Phoenix.

    But with so many amenities, I thought it didn't need to be.

    According to the company's website, DC Ranch is a 4,000-acre community at the base of the McDowell Mountains. It contains four villages — most of which are gated — lined with custom homes and condos, restaurants, shops, schools, and amenities such as hiking trails, pools, and an award-winning private golf club.

    In the most expensive village, Silverleaf, my tour guide drove us up into the mountains to see the highest properties in the community.
    Mega mansions in the desert in Scottsdale with mountains in the background
    A view of DC Ranch from the top of the community.

    Each estate was made up of multiple buildings. Some looked like castles you'd see in Europe. Others reminded me of Greek villas with white adobe exteriors. The valley views from up there were the best I had seen during my trip.

    No matter where you live in Scottsdale, you can access pristine golf courses.
    Foliage and cacti inn front of a golf course in front of homes in front of a mountain range
    A golf course in Scottsdale's DC Ranch neighborhood.

    From entrepreneurs to retirees, Shackelton said many Scottsdale residents share one key interest.

    "One of the main reasons people come here is all the golf. There are about 200 golf courses in Scottsdale and surrounding areas," Shackelton said. "Whether you join a private golf community or play at public courses, they are extremely nice."

    I spotted several of these courses from the highway. Up and down Scottsdale, bright, green hills surrounded by cacti and mountains looked gorgeous. I visited one in DC Ranch and thought it was the most picturesque course I'd ever been to. Scarlet pebble trails from hole to hole contrasted with the green fields that were impeccably kept.

    I haven't played much golf in my time, but if I moved to Scottsdale, I would definitely pick up the sport.

    In just two days, it was easy for me to see why people want to live there.
    The author in a cowboy hat and sunglasses stands smiling in front of cacti and an adobe building in Scottsdale
    The author enjoys her stay in Scottsdale.

    With various plant life, architectural styles, and neighborhoods, Scottsdale brings a heap of luxury to the desert. And visiting may have you wondering why you don't live there yourself.

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  • Sundar Pichai just showed the doubters he’s the wartime general Google needs

    Google and Alphabet Inc. CEO Sundar Pichai arrives at the federal courthouse in Washington, Monday, Oct. 30, 2023.
    Alphabet CEO Sundar Pichai.

    • Alphabet just reported blowout first-quarter earnings that sent the Google owner's stock soaring.
    • The results are very welcome news for CEO Sundar Pichai.
    • He's has been battling a narrative that Google has fallen behind in the AI race.

    There's an AI battle raging, and Sundar Pichai appears to be Google's wartime general.

    With Pichai at the helm, Alphabet just reported blockbuster first-quarter earnings that surpassed analysts' estimates and sent the stock soaring. The company reported a 15% year-on-year revenue increase and issued its first dividend of 20 cents a share.

    The CEO told analysts that Google was well "positioned for the next wave of AI innovation and the opportunity ahead," reminding them the company had been "AI-first" since 2016.

    Google has made gains in its AI development and is planning significant investments and products in the field, including a generative AI search engine.

    It was a much-needed win for Alphabet's CEO, who has been battling a narrative that the company has fallen behind in the AI race since the launch of Microsoft-backed ChatGPT.

    Despite being a pioneer in the field, the company has been fighting perceptions that it's been slow to incorporate AI into its products, especially compared to arch-rival Microsoft.

    Alphabet has also suffered a few setbacks this quarter.

    It was forced to pause Gemini's AI image generating feature after users found it produced historically inaccurate images. There has also been some internal disquiet over a contract with the Israeli government.

    The Gemini incident became the subject of viral criticism and landed Google in the middle of a "woke" culture war. The debacle strengthened the narrative that Google was suddenly behind in the AI race and led to calls for Pichai to step down.

    The CEO has also been under pressure from both investors and Google insiders to become more aggressive with its AI strategy. In addition, some Googlers have become frustrated about the lack of clear leadership.

    Following a round of layoffs in January, Googlers took public aim at its "glassy-eyed leaders" and organized protests in response.

    Pichai has by no means been a passive CEO through the quarter. He's made cuts to headcount and reorganized the company, citing efficiency and speed for the changes. They appear to be paying off.

    Pichai told analysts on Thursday's conference call the company had "further consolidated teams that built AI models under Google DeepMind," claiming it would help simplify development within Google.

    Google is still facing threats to its core search business and has work ahead when it comes to making money from its AI products, but Pichai appeared unfazed on the call.

    "It will play out over time," Pichai said. "I am very excited about the future ahead."

    Google did not immediately respond to a request for comment from Business Insider, made outside normal working hours.

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  • A couple accidentally shipped their cat in an Amazon return package. It arrived safely 6 days later, hundreds of miles away.

    A cat in a box surrounded by bubblewrap.
    A cat in a box surrounded by bubblewrap.

    • A Utah couple accidentally shipped their cat, Galena, in an Amazon return package.
    • The cat was found safe in California after six days without food or water.
    • An Amazon worker found that cat in a box alongside five pairs of steel-toed work boots.

    A Utah couple accidentally shipped their pet cat in an Amazon return package, trapping it in the box without food or water for six days.

    The cat, named Galena, was eventually discovered safe and well in California, Utah's KSL-TV was the first to report.

    According to the local news outlet, Carrie Clark, one of the cat's owners, noticed the pet had gone missing on April 10.

    For nearly a week, Clark, along with family and friends, searched the couple's house and neighborhood, plastering missing posters around the town in the hope of locating the cat, KSL-TV reported.

    "The anxiety and stress of not knowing what happened to her was excruciating," Clark told the local news outlet.

    Clark then received a text notifying her that Galena's microchip had been scanned, per KSL-TV, which reported that she received a call from a veterinarian in California later that day.

    "I didn't believe her at first and thought it was a prank," Clark told KSL-TV.

    The shortest distance between Utah and California is several hundred miles.

    According to the news outlet, the vet told Clark the cat was found inside an Amazon return package, alongside five pairs of steel-toed work boots.

    "I ran to tell my husband that Galena was found, and we broke down upon realizing that she must have jumped into an oversized box that we shipped out the previous Wednesday," Clark said.

    More and more of us are buying and selling things online, and COVID-19 saw an increase in e-commerce, with people increasingly turning to online retail instead of visiting brick-and-mortar stores.

    The shift brought a big spike in the number of online returns in 2021, which has continued to rise, according to eMarketer.

    KSL-TV reported that the cat was rescued from the box after six days without food or water by an Amazon employee who found her in a warehouse and took her to the vet.

    Clark and her husband then flew to California to be reunited with their cat.

    "It was an amazing reunion! Galena instantly stopped shaking and relaxed in my arms when I got to hold her again," Clark said. "Despite being skinnier and some mild dehydration, her bloodwork was completely normal and she was completely unharmed!"

    Clark said she hopes the story inspires all pet owners to microchip their pets.

    According to the American Veterinary Medical Association, one-third of pets will become lost at some point, but those with microchips are much more likely to be reunited with their owners.

    A cat microchip typically costs between $40 and $70.

    Clark didn't immediately respond to a BI request for comment.

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  • Singer Lily Allen weighed in on an age-old airline debate, saying she flies first class, but her kids go coach

    Lily Allen
    Singer Lily Allen.

    • Lily Allen is happy to leave her kids in economy while she flies first class.
    • Speaking on a new episode of her podcast "Miss Me?" the singer joked that she doesn't even want to sit with her kids. 
    • But Allen said she's not a fan of people boasting on social media about refusing to swap their first class seat with families.

    British singer Lily Allen has weighed into the great debate over whether children should be allowed to sit in first class on flights.

    Speaking to her co-host and friend Miquita Oliver in the latest episode of her podcast "Miss Me?" Allen said she's happy to send her kids to economy class while she takes a seat in first class.

    The singer, who has two daughters, Ethel, 13, and Marnie, 11, lives in New York with her husband, actor David Harbour.

    "We are flying to London today to come and see you for your birthday," Allen told Oliver. "I'm going in first class, she's going in economy."

    'Wow, Merry Christmas to Ethel,' Miquita joked back, before asking, "You know what that is?"

    'Selfish?' replied Lily.

    "The circle of life," said Miquita.

    Lily Allen, David Harbour, and children at Stranger Things season 4  premiere
    David Harbour, Lily Allen, and her two daughters at the "Stranger Things" season four premiere.

    The two went on to discuss the viral TikTok trend of people defiantly saying they won't give up their first-class seats to children on planes.

    The correct etiquette when it comes to requesting or refusing a seat swap on flights so that families can sit together has become one of social media's most controversial debates.

    Some say that travelers should have more compassion for families, but others believe you get what you pay for if you don't reserve a seat, and say it's not right to pressure other passengers.

    But while Allen doesn't see the point in seating her own tween in first class, she's not on the side of those who won't give up their seat to a child.

    "I find it fascinating that it has now become something that gives you clout on social media where you say "a mum came up to me on a plane and asked me to move, and I told them to fuck off."

    "Is this what we've become?" she added.

    "Why can't everyone be a bit nicer to each other? … Says me putting myself in first class and my child alone in the back of the plane. I don't want to sit with my kid."

    In the episode, Allen shared some of her other parenting habits, saying she had recently got 10 of her children's parents to sign a pledge to take away their children's smartphones before eighth grade.

    "It's their brains that I'm worried about long term. They've got enough to cope with having me as a mom. I'd rather take smartphones out of it and them hopefully survive."

    She has previously spoken out about choosing to prioritize her children over her career.

    "Some people choose their career over their children. That's their prerogative, but my parents were quite absent when I was a kid, and I feel like that left some nasty scars that I'm not willing to repeat on mine," Allen said in an episode of the Radio Times Podcast.

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