Hello Australia! - Mexico arrests suspects in the murders of two Australian surfers - The San Bernardino massacre becomes a federal terrorism case - And a very bizarre scene plays out on live TV in the San Bernardino suspects' home - And more in your CareerSpot World News Briefs:

French and Belgian police are looking for two more men in connection with the 13 November terrorist attacks in Paris.  The suspects used fake IDs with the names Soufiane Kayal and Samir Bouzid, and they apparently traveled to Hungary with the prime suspect in the Paris attacks, Saleh Abdeslam.  One of the men might be the renter of a Paris home that police searched in the days after the attacks which killed 130 people.  On Friday in Paris, the cafe La Bonne Biere reopened its doors.  It's the first of the 13 November attack sites to reopen.

The FBI has taken over the investigation into the mass murders in San Bernardino, California, formally labelled it "terrorism".   Husband and wife killers Syed Rizwan Farook and Tashfeen Malik shot 14 people dead at a Christmas party and were later gunned down by police in a shootout east of Los Angeles.  The FBI confirmed that Tashfeen Malik used a facebook account with a fake name to post what's being described as a "pledge of allegiance" to the leader of Islamic State Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi.  The group later claimed to have inspired the attack on a luncheon of semi-rural county restaurant inspectors.

Earlier on Friday, there was a positively bizarre scene at the townhouse rented by Farook and Malik:  The FBI released the scene back to the landlord, who promptly opened it up to reporters - several of whom were live on network TV at the time and gave viewers a guided tour.  Reporters rifled through belongings left behind by federal investigators, including drivers licenses and credit cards left on the bed.  In the US Criminal Justice system, this completely taints any evidence that may have been overlooked in the initial inspection of the home and makes it inadmissible in court should more suspects be identified in this plot.  At times, newsreaders cautioned their own reporters not to hold up photos of family members who had not been implicated in the murders.

Mexico has detained three men in the deaths of Aussie surfers Dean Lucas and Adam Coleman.  The men, both 33 years old, were traveling on the Pacific Coast when the suspects stopped and robbed them at gunpoint, according to police who are seeking two more suspects.  A prosecutor say Lucas and Coleman tried to fight off their attackers, but were shot and killed.

Cairo police say 16 people were killed by firebombs thrown into a basement restaurant that had only one door through which to escape.  Three more people were hospitalized for burns and smoke inhalation.  The grotesque attack appears to have nothing to do with Egypt's political and sectarian strife, but appears to be a vendetta for two men refused service at the restaurant earlier.

Nigerians are angry over a proposed law which aims to punish anyone who "propagates false information" on social media with seven years in prison and a A$34,000 fine.  Rights groups see it as an attempt to muzzle the internet, which many see as their last place to turn for unbiased information about their government, the bloated salaries of ministers, the fight against Boko Haram, you name it.  Opponents are talking about it with the hashtag #SayNoToSocialMediaBill

Venezuelans go to the ballot boxes on Sunday for National Assembly elections that could change the nation's political direction  The ruling Socialist government is reportedly in trouble in several polls, amid an ongoing economic crisis that President Nicolas Maduro says was stoked by the United States.  Sensing blood in the water after 15 years in the political wilderness, eligible conservative ex-patriots are actually flying back to Venezuela from the US, Colombia and more conservative nations to cast votes in person. 

Mount Etna erupts at night in Italy, creating lovely video.