AlphaBay was the leader of the dark web for a long time. The digital bazaar was the place to go if you wanted to buy drugs or credit cards. At its peak, more than 350,000 products were listed for sale, which was 10 times the size of the Silk Road market. The AlphaBay was taken offline by the cops.

This week, WIRED published the first in a six-part series detailing the hunt for Alpha02, the mastermind believed to be behind AlphaBay. The new part of the series will be excerpted from Andy Greenberg's new book.

Dozens of hoax calls about mass shootings have been received by schools. Police rush to the scene after a call, only to discover there is no shooter. Law enforcement officials are closing in on the alleged hoaxer after listening to hoax phone call recordings obtained by WIRED. The police are looking for a man with a heavy accent who is from the Middle East or Africa.

There is a bug in the new macOS 13 Ventura operating system that is causing problems. Third-party security products were crippled with the new software update. The bug will be fixed in the next software release.

Although it is not having much success, a new Chinese influence operation is targeting US elections. Here is how you should think about your privacy and security on the bird website. There is a link to this.

There is more to come. The news we didn't cover is highlighted each week. The full stories can be found below. Stay safe out there.

Canadian and Dutch officials are looking into allegations that Chinese police forces have set up illegal police stations in their countries. According to reports, Chinese police forces have been operating out of secret bases and threatening dissidents. The Dutch government said it is investigating exactly what the sites are doing, while officials in Canada said they are looking into the sites.

It's just the beginning of what's to come. Spanish civil rights group Safeguard Defenders first claimed that Chinese police forces were running "overseas police service stations" across the West. More than 38 police service stations have appeared in a number of countries around the world. The report states that overseas police service stations have been used by Chinese police to carry out operations in Europe. Reports say that lawmakers in England and Scotland are going to investigate the stations.