But that’s because even before the 54-year-old portrayed one of the most infamous unfaithful husbands of all time on The Crown, he played the adulterous Noah Solloway on The Affair, which ran for five seasons and interviewers couldn’t help but ask what he thought about, well… affairs!
And what he had to say was pretty fascinating, especially in hindsight after the English actor was spotted kissing his The Pursuit of Love costar Lily Jamesat lunch in Rome in October 2020, a tender scene that unromantically butted up against the fact that West had been married to Catherine FitzGerald since 2010.
Not that there couldn’t have been a plethora of innocent explanations, starting with the fact that the actors had known each other for almost a decade, having shared a Sheffield stage as Iago and Desdemona in a 2011 production of Shakespeare’s Othello.
They also shared a manger, AngharadWood, and he was at their table when this seemingly amorous interaction occurred.
And, incidentally, West was playing James’ father in The Pursuit of Love, a miniseries based on the Nancy Mitford novel of the same name. (“Yes, it hurts,” West, who’s 20 years James’ senior, once said about being cast as Lara Croft’s father in the 2018 Tomb Raider remake with Alicia Vikander. “It does and anyone who says it doesn’t is lying.”)
But days later West was back home in the Cotswalds with FitzGerald, the mother of four of his five kids, and a handwritten note posted to their gates read, “Our marriage is strong and we’re very much still together. Thank you.” Signed, “Catherine & Dominic.”
They even went outside and kissed for the cameras.
As explosive as the scandal felt at the time, not least because of the pandemic-slowed pop culture news cycle (The Pursuit of Love was one of the first big productions in the U.K. to get rolling again as lockdown rules eased), it died down pretty quickly and West and FitzGerald—who will celebrate 14 years of marriage in June—remain very much still together.
However, he told the Sunday Times, “We do joke about it sometimes. Because whenever we went out together, the papers would always say we were ‘putting on a show of unity.’ Even if we’d just been rowing about parking the car or whatever, even if that couldn’t be further from the truth. And so when we go out we do sort of say, ‘Shall we go and have a show of unity up in London?'”
Still, West added, “It was an absurd situation” that was “deeply stressful for my wife and my kids.”
Joe Maher/Getty Images
At least they can all laugh about it now. But West, also known for playing the not particularly monogamous Jimmy McNulty on The Wire, had plenty of occasions to pontificate and crack wise about cheating while answering for the decisions his character was making.
It was hard to tell at times in retrospect whether he was joking or giving his honest opinion, but here’s what he had to say:
(Originally published Oct. 13, 2020, at 3 p.m. PT)
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When Trade Healthcare paid $22 million in March to a ransomware gang that had crippled the corporate along with a total lot of hospitals, clinical practices, and pharmacies across the US, the cybersecurity alternate warned that Trade’s extortion fee would simplest fuel a vicious cycle: Rewarding hackers who had applied a ruthless act of sabotage in opposition to the US health care arrangement nationwide with one of many very finest ransomware payments in history, it appeared, used to make certain to incentivize a novel wave of assaults on equally sensitive victims. Now that wave has arrived.
In April, cybersecurity firm Recorded Future tracked 44 cases of cybercriminal groups concentrating on health care organizations with ransomware assaults, stealing their files, encrypting their methods, and nerve-racking payments from the companies while preserving their networks hostage. That is extra health care victims of ransomware than in any month Recorded Future has seen in its four years of collecting that files, says Allan Liska, a threat intelligence analyst on the corporate. Evaluating that quantity to the 30 incidents in March, it be also the 2nd very finest month-to-month soar in incidents the corporate has ever tracked.
Whereas Liska notes that he can no longer guarantee of the rationale for that spike, he argues it be unlikely to be a accident that it follows within the wake of Trade Healthcare’s eight-decide payout to the hacker community known as AlphV or BlackCat that used to be tormenting the corporate.
“All these trim payments are fully going to incentivize ransomware actors to drag after health care services,” says Liska, “because they assume there’s extra cash to made be there.”
Whereas most of the health care ransomware victims of the closing two months bear suffered quietly, a couple of bear experienced lifestyles-threatening disruptions on a scale that’s advanced to miss. Ascension, a network of 140 hospitals and 40 senior living amenities, used to be centered by a ransomware community known as Dusky Basta and compelled to divert ambulances from hospitals in some cases, in step with CNN, doubtlessly delaying lifesaving emergency procedures. The infamous hacker community LockBit published 61 gigabytes of files stolen from the Simone Veil clinical institution in Cannes, France, after it refused to pay a ransom. And earlier this month, pathology firm Synnovis used to be hit by ransomware, believed to be the work of Russian community Qilin, forcing a few hospitals in London to prolong surgeries and even witness extra donations of O-form blood as a result of the hospitals’ inability to compare existing blood donations with sufferers needing transfusions.
In actuality, ransomware assaults on health care targets had been on the upward push even forward of the Trade Healthcare attack, which crippled the United Healthcare subsidiary’s ability to process insurance payments on behalf of its health care supplier potentialities starting up in February of this three hundred and sixty five days. Recorded Future’s Liska factors out that every month of 2024 has seen extra health care ransomware assaults than the identical month in any old three hundred and sixty five days that he’s tracked. (Whereas this Can also’s 32 health care assaults is decrease than Can also 2023’s 33, Liska says he expects the extra contemporary quantity to rise as diversified incidents proceed to come attend to gentle.)
Yet Liska aloof factors to the April spike visible in Recorded Future’s files in particular as a likely discover-on attach of Trade’s debacle—no longer simplest the outsize ransom that Trade paid to AlphV, but also the highly visible disruption that the attack precipitated. “Because these assaults are so impactful, diversified ransomware groups witness an different,” Liska says. He also notes that health care ransomware assaults bear continued to develop even in contrast to total ransomware incidents, which stayed rather flat or fell total: The principle four months of this three hundred and sixty five days, as an example, observed 1,153 incidents in contrast to 1,179 within the identical duration of 2023.
When WIRED reached out to United Healthcare for statement, a spokesperson for the corporate pointed to the total rise in health care ransomware assaults origin in 2022, suggesting that the total fashion predated Trade’s incident. The spokesperson also quoted from testimony United Healthcare CEO Andrew Witty gave in a congressional listening to about the Trade Healthcare ransomware attack closing month. “As now we bear addressed the many challenges in responding to this attack, including going thru the count on for ransom, I had been guided by the overriding priority to impact every part doable to provide protection to peoples’ private health knowledge,” Witty urged the listening to. “As chief govt officer, the decision to pay a ransom used to be mine. This used to be one of many hardest choices I’ve ever needed to design. And I wouldn’t wish it on anyone.”
Trade Healthcare’s deeply messy ransomware arena used to be advanced extra—and made even extra attention-grabbing for the ransomware hacker underworld—by the fact that AlphV seems to bear taken Trade’s $22 million extortion fee and jilted its hacker partners, disappearing with out giving these affiliates their gash attend of the earnings. That led to a highly uncommon arena the save the affiliates then supplied the solutions to a definite community, RansomHub, which demanded a 2nd ransom from Trade while threatening to leak the solutions on its darkish web discipline.
That 2nd extortion threat later inexplicably disappeared from RansomHub’s discipline. United Healthcare has declined to reply to WIRED’s questions about that 2nd incident or to reply as to whether or no longer it paid a 2nd ransom.
Many ransomware hackers nonetheless broadly take into consideration that Trade Healthcare in truth paid two ransoms, says Jon DiMaggio, a security researcher with cybersecurity firm Analyst1 who recurrently talks to members of ransomware gangs to bring together intelligence. “Everybody used to be talking about the double ransom,” DiMaggio says. “If the of us I’m talking to are enthusiastic on this, it’s no longer a soar to imagine that diversified hackers are as wisely.”
The noise that arena created, as wisely because the dimensions of disruption to health care services from Trade Healthcare’s downtime and its hefty ransom, served because the appropriate advertisement for the lucrative doubtless of hacking fragile, high-stakes health care victims, DiMaggio says. “Successfully being care has frequently had so great to lose, it’s correct one thing the adversary has realized now thanks to Trade,” he says. “They correct had so great leverage.”
As these assaults snowball—and a few health care victims bear likely forked over their be pleased ransoms to manipulate the agonize to their lifestyles-saving methods—the assaults are no longer vulnerable to discontinue. “It’s frequently regarded treasure an awfully simple aim,” DiMaggio notes. “Now it seems treasure an awfully simple aim that’s gripping to pay.”
Up to this point 6/12/24 9:35am ET: This story has been updated to replicate that ransomware incident totals comprise the fist four months of the three hundred and sixty five days, no longer correct April.
JERUSALEM — A deadly Israeli airstrike on a tent camp in Rafah late Sunday drew widespread international condemnation Monday — focusing further scrutiny on Israel’s controversial offensive against Hamas in the south and the desperate plight of Gaza’s civilians.
Witnesses described a horrific scene late Sunday as fires tore through the makeshift encampment in the Tal al-Sultan neighborhood, killing at least 45 people, according to the Gaza Health Ministry. Parents were burned alive in their tents while children screamed for help. Doctors recounted struggling to treat gruesome shrapnel wounds with dwindling medical supplies.
In an address to parliament Monday, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu called the Rafah strike a “tragic accident.” It was a departure from public statements by the Israeli military, which had previously referred to a targeted strike on a Hamas compound using “precise munitions” and “precise intelligence.”
The Israel Defense Forces said two militants were killed in the attack, including the commander of Hamas operations in the West Bank. “There were many measures taken before the attack to minimize harm to non-involved people,” the IDF said Monday, adding that the incident was under investigation.
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A spokesperson for the White House National Security Council, speaking on the condition of anonymity to discuss a sensitive matter, said the images from Rafah were “heartbreaking.” “Israel has a right to go after Hamas,” the spokesperson said, noting the killing of the two militants, but “Israel must take every precaution possible to protect civilians.”
The United States has yet to weigh in publicly on Friday’s ruling by the International Court of Justice ordering an immediate halt to Israel’s offensive in Rafah. Nearly a million Palestinians have been displaced this month, the vast majority from Rafah, which had been a place of last refuge for tens of thousands of families.
On Sunday night it was the site of one of the most horrifying scenes of the war.
Mohammad Al-Haila, 35, was headed to buy some goods from a local vendor when he saw a huge flash followed by successive booms. Then he saw the flames.
“I felt like my body was freezing from fear,” Haila, who was displaced from central Gaza, told The Washington Post by phone.
He ran toward the area to search for relatives.
“I saw flames rising, charred bodies, people running from everywhere and calls for help getting louder,” he said. “We were powerless to save them.”
Haila lost seven relatives in the attack. The oldest was 70 years old. Four were children.
“We were not able to identify them until this morning because of the charred bodies,” he said. “The faces were eroded, and the features were completely disappeared.”
Ahmed Al-Rahl, 30, still hears the screams.
He and his family were preparing for bed when they heard several large explosions, said Rahl, who is displaced from the north. Their tent shook. Mass confusion took over the camp.
“No one knew what to do,” he said. “Children who were with their families in those tents rushed to us, asking us to save their parents who were burning.”
Rahl had a fire extinguisher and rushed to help.
“I didn’t know what to do to help people as they burned,” he said. Around him there were “dismembered bodies, charred bodies, children without heads, bodies as if they had melted,” he said.
There was no water to extinguish the fire, which consumed the cloth and plastic tents. Gas canisters used for cooking exploded, Rahl said.
“I saw with my own eyes someone burning and crying for help, and I could not save his life,” he said.
Mohammad Abu Shahma, 45, rushed to check on his extended family when he heard that the fire was spreading. His brother’s tent was about a quarter-mile from the worst of the carnage. Shahma figured he must be safe.
He found his brother, a father of 10, and his 3-year-old niece, Palestine, dead. There was blood everywhere, Shahma said. Shrapnel had struck his brother in the chest and neck; the child had been hit in the head. Another daughter, 9-year-old Jana, was injured.
Around 10 p.m. Sunday, the dead and wounded began pouring into the area’s few field clinics.
Twenty-eight people were dead on arrival at a temporary emergency trauma center run by Doctors Without Borders less than two miles from the strike site, according to Samuel Johann, the group’s emergency coordinator in Gaza. The clinic treated 180 additional patients with severe burns, shrapnel wounds, missing body parts and other traumatic injuries, he said.
Farther west, at a clinic run by International Medical Corps, plastic surgeon Ahmed al-Mokhallalati described family members searching desperately for loved ones.
One little girl, he said, was asking everyone she passed if they had seen her parents. Mokhallalati said they were among the dead.
Many people came in with horrific wounds and required amputations, he said, as shrapnel flew across the camp and pierced people’s tents. Over a grueling, relentless night, he and his colleagues conducted at least 12 hours-long surgeries, Mokhallalati said.
They ran out of medical gloves, gowns and other basic supplies to treat open wounds. “We are running out of everything, literally,” he said
Patients needing further care had few places to go, he said. Rafah’s two main hospitals have been evacuated. The smaller Kuwait hospital said Monday that it had to close after repeated attacks. One of the only options left was al-Aqsa Martyrs Hospital, a rough ride away in central Gaza.
Mokhallalati recounted operating on a 6-year-old girl with deep shrapnel wounds that stretched from her thigh to her abdomen. She died early Monday morning, he said.
The makeshift camp in Tal al-Sultan was outside Israel’s designated evacuation zone in Rafah, and residents were not ordered to leave before the strikes.
The area was at the edge of, but not included in, a map of humanitarian zones provided by the IDF online and in recent announcements. Gazans, however, short on bandwidth and cellphone battery power, often rely for information on word-of-mouth and Arabic-language pamphlets dropped by the IDF. Residents complain that the evacuation orders and accompanying maps are confusingly worded and difficult to follow. Many believed they were in a safe place.
In its statement, the IDF said “the attack did not take place in the humanitarian area in Al Mawasi,” referring to a coastal region northwest of Rafah where it has ordered evacuees.
New arrivals to Mawasi have told The Post the area is desolate, overcrowded and devoid of even the most basic services. Some families, many who have already been uprooted numerous times during the war, decided to stay in Rafah.
French President Emmanuel Macron said Monday that he was “outraged by the Israeli strikes that have killed many displaced persons” and called for “an immediate cease-fire.”
Canadian Foreign Minister Mélanie Joly also demanded a cease-fire, saying, “This level of human suffering must come to an end.” A spokesperson for the ministry said the country was following up on reports that two Canadian citizens were among the dead in Rafah.
The Foreign Ministry in Germany, one of Israel’s most stalwart supporters in Europe, said in a statement on X on Monday that the images from the attack were “unbearable” and that “the civilian population in Gaza must urgently be better protected.”
Shahma spent Monday packing up. His extended family of 50 people had decided that women and children would move to Mawasi, he said, and the men would stay in nearby Khan Younis.
“We did not even find time to grieve for those we lost,” he said. “All that matters to us now is to save those who remain.”
Haila spent the day searching scorched corpses at the clinic in Tal al-Sultan for any sign of his missing family members.
“What we live in this life cannot be described,” he said. It was like being “on the waiting list” to die.
Harb reported from London. Sarah Dadouch in Beirut, Rachel Pannett in Wellington, New Zealand, Niha Masih in Seoul, Lior Soroka in Tel Aviv, Hazem Balousha in Cairo, Amanda Coletta in Toronto and Tyler Pager in Washington contributed to this report.
Meta’s launched a well-known traipse in opposition to a known sextortion crew working out of Nigeria, which has resulted in the removal of around 70,000 cumulative profiles, Pages and groups from Facebook and IG, besides improved measures to defend them from returning.
Meta says that these accounts were related with a crew known as “Yahoo Boys”, a known scam collective. Yahoo Boys firstly relied upon the aged “Nigerian Prince” form of scam, the build they’d strive to dupe unsuspecting marks with promises of riches. But extra recently, they’ve switched to romance scams, the build they raze faux profiles, then persuade their targets to portion cash and/or non-public particulars to defend the connection.
Or, as on this latest push from Meta, intimate photography, which they then use to extort cash from their victims.
And they’ve been extremely active, on IG particularly.
“We eradicated around 63,000 Instagram accounts in Nigeria that tried to straight have interaction in monetary sextortion scams.These included a smaller coordinated community of around 2,500 accounts that we were ready to hyperlink to a crew of around 20 folk. They centered basically grownup men in the US and primitive faux accounts to conceal their identities.”
63k profiles is loads, and you too can imagine how this crew would possibly per chance well study to make use of a coordinated effort of this size to intimidate targets.
Moreover this, Meta additionally notes that it detected a coordinated community of around 2,500 accounts thru a combination of contemporary technical indicators and processes.
“The massive majority of those accounts had already been detected and disabled by our enforcement systems, and this investigation allowed us to take away the rest accounts and sign extra relating to the ways being primitive to augment our computerized detection.”
So, truly, Meta’s been ready to make use of this mission to learn extra relating to the arrangement by which Yahoo Boys and other groups coordinate and work together to strain customers.
Which, ideally, will gaze Meta better positioned to remain the identical happening in future, nonetheless as always, whenever detection systems make stronger, so too enact the ways deployed by these groups. It’s an ongoing game of cat and mouse, nonetheless on steadiness, per its ongoing reporting, it does seem that Meta has been ready to originate the upper hand in a number of the larger, extra impactful (at scale) cases.
Moreover these profiles, Meta additionally eradicated 1,300 Facebook profiles, and 5,700 groups, that had been offering tips on habits on-line scams. These groups were additionally apparently related with the Yahoo Boys collective.
“Their efforts included offering to sell scripts and guides to make use of when scamming folk, and sharing links to collections of photography to make use of when populating faux accounts.”
Sextortion and romance scams are factual up there among the worst forms of on-line crime, as they target prone and determined folk, with promises of something that can never eventuate. Pointless to notify, all scams target weak point, nonetheless these form of programs seem especially cruel, and as such, it’s supreme to gaze Meta taking extra steps to worth them out.
But once more, the scammers will evolve, and in the age of AI, there are truly all contemporary vectors for them to tap into to galvanize their schemes.
Hopefully, Meta will additionally be ready to adapt its systems in line, in portray to defend some extra or less steadiness in enforcement.