Walter Vincenti Photography; Netflix; Samantha Lee/Insider
Lukas DiSparrow is a Polish actor who s ready to quit after bad luck on movies such as Men in Black: International and Justice League.
A one-line actor reveals the thankless and grueling life of Hollywood s countless extras
Lukas DiSparrow is a Polish actor who s ready to quit after bad luck on movies such as Men in Black: International and Justice League.
Advertisement
No new Marvel Cinematic Universe film hit the box office for the first time in 11 years, but fans say it was actually a good thing
Marvel; Walt Disney Studios Motion Pictures; Sony Pictures Entertainment; Disney+; Samantha Lee/Insider
This story is available exclusively to Insider subscribers. Become an Insider and start reading now.
A US security expert says an Iranian official tried to recruit her as a hacker-for-hire on LinkedIn.
Chris Kubecka was offered more than $100,000 a month to aid Iran s hacking, she told Insider.
It demonstrates nation-states willingness to use public social media channels to recruit.
Chris Kubecka has spent her career defending against cybercriminals but her closest encounter with a nation-state hacker group came in the form of an unexpected job offer on LinkedIn.
Kubecka, an American security researcher, was living in the Netherlands in late 2017 when she received a LinkedIn connection request, followed by a message, out of the blue from an Iranian official.
Pascal Le Segretain/Getty; Samantha Lee/Insider
The first person in the UK to reportedly receive the Starlink kit told Insider how he set it up.
Philip Hall said his download speed jumped from 0.5 megabits per second to 85 Mbps with Starlink.
The router s range doesn t stretch that far, but Hall said what Musk has done is transformational.
At the end of last month, the UK approved Elon Musk s Starlink internet as the billionaire reaches closer to his goal of covering Earth with up to 42,000 satellites to create a superfast global broadband service.
Starlink is available to order in more than six countries. Northern US, southern Canada and now parts of Europe are taking part in Starlink s Better Than Nothing Beta test, which costs $99 a month, plus $499 for a kit with a tripod, a WiFi router, and a terminal to connect to the Starlink satellites.