Hackers stole a copy of 'Orange is the New Black' season five

The next season of Orange is the New Black isn’t supposed to premiere until June 9th, but the first episode has already leaked. That’s because a hacker or group of hackers going by the name ‘TheDarkOverlord stole the content from a third party, and t…

Source: Engadget – Hackers stole a copy of ‘Orange is the New Black’ season five

EPA Website Removes Climate Science Site From Public View After Two Decades

Last week there were reports that the EPA climate change website was set to be taken down, though later the EPA denied that. On Friday evening, however, the Environmental Protection Agency announced its website would be “undergoing changes” to better represent the new direction the agency is taking, triggering the removal of several agency websites containing detailed climate data and scientific information (paywalled; alternative source). From a report on The Washington Post: One of the websites that appeared to be gone had been cited to challenge statements made by the EPA’s new administrator, Scott Pruitt. Another provided detailed information on the previous administration’s Clean Power Plan, including fact sheets about greenhouse gas emissions on the state and local levels and how different demographic groups were affected by such emissions. The changes came less than 24 hours before thousands of protesters were set to march in Washington and around the country in support of political action to push back against the Trump administration’s rollbacks of former president Barack Obama’s climate policies.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.



Source: Slashdot – EPA Website Removes Climate Science Site From Public View After Two Decades

Surgeon Plans To 'Reawaken' Cryogenically Frozen Brains, Transplant Them Into Someone Else's Skull

Sergio Canavero, the Italian surgeon who plans to perform the world’s first human head transplant within the next year, says he is preparing to reawaken cryogenically frozen brains and transplant them into someone else’s skull. “In an interview with a German-language magazine, Canavero says he will attempt to bring the first brains frozen in liquid nitrogen at an Arizona-based cryogenics bank back to life ‘not in 100 years,’ but three years at the latest,” reports National Post. From the report: Transplanting a brain only — and not an entire head — gets around formidable rejection issues, Canavero said, since there will be no need to reconnect and stitch up severed vessels, nerves, tendons and muscles as there is when a new head is fused onto a brain-dead donor body. Canavero allows that one “problematic” issue with brain transplants, however, would be that “no aspect of your original external body remains the same.” “Your head is no longer there, your brain is transplanted into an entirely different skull,” he told OOOM magazine, published by the same company that handles the Italian brain surgeon’s public relations. The flamboyant neuroscientist who some ethicists have decried as “nuts” rattled the transplant world when he first outlined his plans for a human head transplant two years ago in the journal, Surgical Neurology International. Bioethicist Arthur Caplan called Canavero’s latest proposal to merge head transplants with “resurrecting” the frozen dead beyond ridiculous. “People have their own doubts about whether anything can be salvaged from these frozen heads or bodies because of the damage freezing does,” said Caplan, head of ethics at NYU Langone Medical Centre in New York City. “Then saying that he has some technique for making this happen, that has never been demonstrated in frozen animals, is absurd.”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.



Source: Slashdot – Surgeon Plans To ‘Reawaken’ Cryogenically Frozen Brains, Transplant Them Into Someone Else’s Skull

Prey Heads to PS4 in New PlayStation Store Releases Next Week

Survive a hostile alien onslaught as an experiment subject in Prey, which heads to PS4 as part of the new PlayStation Store releases next week! :alien:

Check out the rest of what’s new on PSN beginning next Tuesday from SIEA Social Media…

Prey Heads to PS4 in New PlayStation Store Releases Next Week

Source: PS4 News – Prey Heads to PS4 in New PlayStation Store Releases Next Week

MIT Creates 3D-Printing Robot That Can Construct a Home Off-Grid In 14 Hours

Kristine Lofgren writes: Home building hasn’t changed much over the years, but leave it to MIT to take things to the next level. A new technology built at MIT can construct a simple dome structure in 14 hours and it’s powered by solar panels, so you can take it to remote areas. MIT’s 3D-printing robot can construct the entire basic structure of a building and can be customized to fit the local terrain in ways that traditional methods can’t do. It even has a built-in scoop so it can prepare the building site and gather its own construction materials. You can watch a video of the 3D-printing robot in action here.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.



Source: Slashdot – MIT Creates 3D-Printing Robot That Can Construct a Home Off-Grid In 14 Hours

Open Ports Create Backdoors In Millions of Smartphones

An anonymous reader writes: “Mobile applications that open ports on Android smartphones are opening those devices to remote hacking, claims a team of researchers from the University of Michigan,” reports Bleeping Computer. Researchers say they’ve identified 410 popular mobile apps that open ports on people’s smartphones. They claim that an attacker could connect to these ports, which in turn grant access to various phone features, such as photos, contacts, the camera, and more. This access could be leveraged to steal photos, contacts, or execute commands on the target’s phone. Researchers recorded various demos to prove their attacks. Of these 410 apps, there were many that had between 10 and 50 million downloads on the official Google Play Store and even an app that came pre-installed on an OEMs smartphones. “Research on the mobile open port problem started after researchers read a Trend Micro report from 2015 about a vulnerability in the Baidu SDK, which opened a port on user devices, providing an attacker with a way to access the phone of a user who installed an app that used the Baidu SDK,” reports Bleeping Computer. “That particular vulnerability affected over 100 million smartphones, but Baidu moved quickly to release an update. The paper detailing the team’s work is entitled Open Doors for Bob and Mallory: Open Port Usage in Android Apps and Security Implications, and was presented Wednesday, April 26, at the 2nd IEEE European Symposium on Security and Privacy that took place this week in Paris, France.”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.



Source: Slashdot – Open Ports Create Backdoors In Millions of Smartphones

Airbnb Gives In To Regulator's Demand To Test For Racial Discrimination By Hosts

As part of an agreement with California regulators, Airbnb will allow the government to test for racial discrimination by hosts. The Guardian reports: The California Department of Fair Employment and Housing (DFEH) announced Thursday that it had resolved a complaint it filed against Airbnb with an agreement that forces the company to permit the state to conduct “fair housing testing” of certain hosts. That means that for the first time the San Francisco-based company is giving a regulatory body permission to conduct the kind of racial discrimination audits that officials have long used to enforce fair housing laws against traditional landlords. The DFEH’s original complaint — which had not previously been disclosed — was based on research and a growing number of reports suggesting that hosts regularly refuse to rent to guests due to their race, a problem exposed last year under the hashtag #AirbnbWhileBlack.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.



Source: Slashdot – Airbnb Gives In To Regulator’s Demand To Test For Racial Discrimination By Hosts

Washington State Orchard Owners Look To Robots As Labor Shortage Worsens

An anonymous reader quotes a report from Seattle Times: Harvesting Washington state’s vast fruit orchards each year requires thousands of farmworkers, and many of them work illegally in the United States. That system eventually could change dramatically as at least two companies are rushing to get robotic fruit-picking machines to market. The robotic pickers don’t get tired and can work 24 hours a day. FFRobotics and Abundant Robotics, of Hayward, California, are racing to get their mechanical pickers to market within the next couple of years. Members of the $7.5 billion annual Washington agriculture industry have long grappled with labor shortages, and depend on workers coming up from Mexico each year to harvest many crops. While financial details are not available, the builders say the robotic pickers should pay for themselves in two years. That puts the likely cost of the machines in the hundreds of thousands of dollars each. FFRobotics is developing a machine that has three-fingered grips to grab fruit and twist or clip it from a branch. The machine would have between four and 12 robotic arms, and can pick up to 10,000 apples an hour, Gad Kober, a co-founder of Israel-based FFRobotics, said. One machine would be able to harvest a variety of crops, taking 85 to 90 percent of the crop off the trees, Kober said. Humans could pick the rest. Abundant Robotics is working on a picker that uses suction to vacuum apples off trees.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.



Source: Slashdot – Washington State Orchard Owners Look To Robots As Labor Shortage Worsens

NSA Changes Rules to Spy Less on American Citizens

Big Brother is watching a less closely, as the National Security Agency announced the stoppage of a controversial act in their warrantless wiretapping activities. Previously, an American citizen’s text and email communication mentioning foreign people of interest had been marked for collection, under Section 702 of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act. The NSA has changed their policy to only deal with direct communications from these foreign suspects:



Instead, NSA will limit such collection to internet communications that are sent directly to or from a foreign target.

Critics of Section 702’s information collection have been outspoken as to concerns of the policy restricting a citizen’s 4th Amendment (unreasonable searches and seizures) rights. In this change, the NSA is lessening the chance to collect data from persons having no discernible connections to foreign targets. The Agency furthermore announced most of this “upstream” data collected will be deleted, to quell any further privacy concerns. Changes to policies all stemmed from in-house reviews, making one believe that pressures from such controversial actions were finally too much for Big Brother to deal with.

Discussion

Source: [H]ardOCP – NSA Changes Rules to Spy Less on American Citizens

Yik Yak is dead, long live Yik Yak

Enlarge / Tyler Droll, CEO of Yik Yak (L) and Brooks Buffington, COO, of Yik Yak, won the Fastest Rising Startup award at the TechCrunch 8th Annual Crunchies Awards at the Davies Symphony Hall on February 5, 2015 in San Francisco, California. (credit: Steve Jennings / Getty Images News)

Well, it’s official.

On Friday, the Yik Yak app officially closed up shop. The company’s founders, Tyler Droll and Brooks Buffington, wrote up a short blog post saying that they would be “winding down the Yik Yak app over the coming week as we start tinkering around with what’s ahead for our brand, our technology, and ourselves.” (What that means in plain English, we have no idea.)

Droll and Buffington confirmed the recent acquisition of its engineering team by Square, and they said it “feels like a great fit.”

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Source: Ars Technica – Yik Yak is dead, long live Yik Yak