Russian-Controlled Telecom Hijacks Traffic For Mastercard, Visa, And 22 Other Services

An anonymous reader quotes the security editor at Ars Technica:
On Wednesday, large chunks of network traffic belonging to MasterCard, Visa, and more than two dozen other financial services companies were briefly routed through a Russian government-controlled telecom under unexplained circumstances that renew lingering questions about the trust and reliability of some of the most sensitive Internet communications.

Anomalies in the border gateway protocol — which routes large-scale amounts of traffic among Internet backbones, ISPs, and other large networks — are common and usually the result of human error. While it’s possible Wednesday’s five- to seven-minute hijack of 36 large network blocks may also have been inadvertent, the high concentration of technology and financial services companies affected made the incident “curious” to engineers at network monitoring service BGPmon. What’s more, the way some of the affected networks were redirected indicated their underlying prefixes had been manually inserted into BGP tables, most likely by someone at Rostelecom, the Russian government-controlled telecom that improperly announced ownership of the blocks.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.



Source: Slashdot – Russian-Controlled Telecom Hijacks Traffic For Mastercard, Visa, And 22 Other Services

Merriam-Webster Uses Apple Fans to Define 'Sheeple' 

Merriam-Webster’s dictionary has been flirting with the thin line between cheekily relevant and irritatingly attention seeking lately. The evolving compendium of the English language has garnered headlines recently with its social media swipes at the Trump administration. And now, the dictionary is trolling Apple fans…

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Source: Gizmodo – Merriam-Webster Uses Apple Fans to Define ‘Sheeple’ 

The Handmaid’s Tale is the most horrific thing I have ever seen

Enlarge / The handmaid June (Elizabeth Moss) must wear regulation red, with a bonnet covering her face, to signify that role as a slave designated to bear children for a prominent man. (credit: The Handmaid’s Tale / Hulu)

One of the most exciting new science fiction shows on the Web right now isn’t exactly fun. The Handmaid’s Tale, currently streaming its first three episodes on Hulu, may repulse you, incense you, or just make you cry. But like a good workout that makes your muscles burn, the hurt of watching this series eventually results in something great.

Based on the celebrated 1985 novel by Margaret Atwood, The Handmaid’s Tale is a half-dystopia, half-fairy tale about what happens to the United States after a far-right religious group seizes control of the government. There are a few notable changes from the novel, but, for the most part, the series follows the events of Atwood’s book faithfully.

We aren’t quite sure how the new nation of Gilead was formed, but we hear bits and pieces about a war that has left “the colonies” a radioactive wasteland. Food is scarce, and an infertility epidemic is sweeping the world.

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Source: Ars Technica – The Handmaid’s Tale is the most horrific thing I have ever seen

EPA pulls climate science web pages to reflect White House views

President Trump and Environmental Protection Agency chief Scott Pruitt aren’t exactly fans of climate science, and they’re scaling back the EPA’s website to reflect their views. The EPA has started implementing a site revision that will “reflect the…

Source: Engadget – EPA pulls climate science web pages to reflect White House views

Is Trader Joe's Pour-Over Bag the Ultimate in Coffee Convenience?

People who really love their coffee are always looking for ways to drink good coffee in spaces that are not conducive to brewing good coffee, and Trade Joe’s seeks to fill this need with a handy little brew-in-the-bag coffee pouch, complete with spout.

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Source: LifeHacker – Is Trader Joe’s Pour-Over Bag the Ultimate in Coffee Convenience?

How to Talk Across the Aisle When You're Marching For Science (Or Climate Change)

The March for Science brought historic numbers of scientists to the streets to stand up for evidence-based reasoning, but whether it actually helped heal the partisan divide on issues like climate change is far less certain. A cursory look at the post-March media coverage suggests we’re as trapped as ever in our…

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Source: Gizmodo – How to Talk Across the Aisle When You’re Marching For Science (Or Climate Change)

Some Of The Pentagon's Critical Infrastructure Still Runs Windows 95 And 98

SmartAboutThings writes:
The Pentagon is set to complete its Windows 10 transition by the end of this year, but nearly 75% of its control system devices still run Windows XP or other older versions, including Windows 95 and 98. A Pentagon official now wants the bug bounty program of the top U.S. defense agency expanded to scan for vulnerabilities in its critical infrastructure.
DefenseOne raises the possibility of “building and electrical systems, HVAC equipment and other critical infrastructure laden with internet-connected sensors,” with one military program manager saying “A lot of these systems are still Windows 95 or 98, and that’s OK — if they’re not connected to the internet.” Windows Report notes that though Microsoft no longer supports Windows XP, “the Defense Department is paying Microsoft to continue providing support for the legacy OS.”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.



Source: Slashdot – Some Of The Pentagon’s Critical Infrastructure Still Runs Windows 95 And 98

Watch 29 Make Daily Life Feel Otherworldly In Its New Trailer

Apartment life can be all sorts of things. Cramped. Predictable. Embarrassing. Now imagine taking the challenges of occupying a space the side of few shipping crates and adding a creepy roommate who looks right out of a Guillermo del Toro short. Things start to get weird real fast.

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Source: Kotaku – Watch 29 Make Daily Life Feel Otherworldly In Its New Trailer

Fired University IT Workers to File Discrimination Lawsuit

The University of California had to have seen this coming, right? The institution fired 50 full-time tech workers and eliminated 30 contractor positions so they could be replaced with offshore labor, but the ex-employees are fighting back with a lawsuit that alleges age discrimination, as an entire age group is being replaced with a much younger one. Also argued is that the new hires fail to represent the state’s diversity in any way.



Replacing IT workers with offshore labor is common in the private sector, but almost unheard of at a state-supported, public institution. “To take a workforce that is overwhelmingly over the age of 40 and replace them with folks who are mainly in their 20s — early 20s, in fact — we think is age discrimination,” said the IT employees’ attorney, Randall Strauss, of Gwilliam Ivary Chiosso Cavalli & Brewer. The national origin discrimination claim is the result of taking a workforce “that reflects the diversity of California” and is summarily let go and is “replaced with people who come from one particular part of the world,” said Strauss.

Discussion

Source: [H]ardOCP – Fired University IT Workers to File Discrimination Lawsuit

Banks Should Let Ancient Programming Language COBOL Die

I thought that if something ain’t broke, you shouldn’t fix it, but some think that the programming language that powers banking systems should be replaced with something a bit more modern. The argument is that only old geezers know COBOL, and we may be in for a little upkeep problem since they aren’t going to live forever. So what, exactly, is preventing younger folk from putting that language on their resume?



Despite the fact that three trillion dollars run through COBOL systems every single day they are mostly maintained by retired programming veterans. There are almost no new COBOL programmers available so as retirees start passing away, then so does the maintenance for software written in the ancient programming language. Döderlein says that banks have three options when it comes to deciding how to deal with this emerging crisis. First off, they can simply ignore the problem and hope for the best. Software written in COBOL is still good for some functions, but ignoring the problem won’t fix how impractical it is for making new consumer-centric products.

Discussion

Source: [H]ardOCP – Banks Should Let Ancient Programming Language COBOL Die

Public defender lambastes judicial ruling to not fix flawed court software

Enlarge / The René C. Davidson Courthouse, at 1225 Fallon Street, in Oakland, hosts the Alameda County Superior Court. (credit: Wally Gobetz / Flickr)

The public defender’s office in Alameda County, California, has recently appealed a local judge’s recent rejection of its demands to fix an upgraded court software. That software led to the unconstitutional and erroneous jailing of some of its clients.

“These delays and errors violate Government Code § 69844’s express requirement that Superior Court clerks enter judicial orders ‘forthwith,’ as well as the constitutional right to a complete and accurate record on appeal and the Fourth Amendment prohibition upon unlawful arrests and illegal searches,” Charles Denton, an assistant public defender, wrote in his April 10 brief.

Denton largely reprised many of the same arguments that his office made when he appeared before the Superior Court.

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Source: Ars Technica – Public defender lambastes judicial ruling to not fix flawed court software

Startups Struggle For Survival As Investors Turn 'Picky'

An anonymous reader quotes The Wall Street Journal:
Eighteen months ago, Beepi Inc. was rapidly expanding its online used-car business to 16 U.S. cities where people could buy cut-rate vehicles adorned with giant shiny bows. Beepi doesn’t exist anymore. After burning through more than $120 million in capital, the startup failed to raise more cash and shut down in February. Its roughly 270 employees cleared out of the cavernous Mountain View, California headquarters, leaving behind the ping-pong table and putting green.
Beepi’s rapid demise offers a glimpse into the changing fortunes of Silicon Valley startups, many of which have struggled to adjust since a two-year investment frenzy came to an end. In 2014 and 2015, mutual funds, hedge funds and other investors pumped billions into companies that they now see as overvalued, and unlikely to pull off an initial public offering. As venture capitalists became more discerning, investment in U.S. tech startups plummeted by 30% in dollar terms last year from a year earlier.
The article also points out that “much of the money still being invested is pouring into the upper echelon of highly valued start-ups like Airbnb and WeWork or younger ones with clear paths to profit,” leaving “scores” of previously well-funded startups now struggling to survive.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.



Source: Slashdot – Startups Struggle For Survival As Investors Turn ‘Picky’

Windows 95, 98 And XP Still Power A Majority Of The Pentagon’s Critical Systems

Windows 95, 98 And XP Still Power A Majority Of The Pentagon’s Critical Systems
Windows 95 is alive and well in the United States Pentagon. Daryl Haegley, program manager for the Office of the Assistant Secretary of Defense for Energy, Installations and Environment reported at an event hosted by OSIsoft that 75% of the Department of Defense computers Windows XP or older (including Windows 98 and even Windows 95). This

Source: Hot Hardware – Windows 95, 98 And XP Still Power A Majority Of The Pentagon’s Critical Systems

Amazon Alexa AI Will Soon Be Able To Whisper Sweet Nothings And Sound More Like A Human

Amazon Alexa AI Will Soon Be Able To Whisper Sweet Nothings And Sound More Like A Human
Does your Echo or Echo Dot sound a little too robotic for your tastes when responding to queries? If that’s the case, then Amazon is working diligently to make your digital assistant AI mastermind sound a bit more “human” with regards to its speech patterns.

Until now, Alexa’s female voice, while helpful in an increasing number of ways

Source: Hot Hardware – Amazon Alexa AI Will Soon Be Able To Whisper Sweet Nothings And Sound More Like A Human

Watch Elon Musk's "Boring" Tunnel System Speed Cars along at 130 MPH

It’s like an underground roller coaster for your car: Musk’s new video demonstrates his vision for an underground tunnel system that will transport cars at high speeds via “skates.” The first network will be constructed under Los Angeles—it’s going to be fun being down there during an earthquake.



…Musk said that there are still important challenges to be overcome for that vision to become a reality. The Boring Company is working on bringing the overall cost of boring the tunnels down while increasing the speed. With better materials and more power, Musk believes that they can increase the speed of the current machines, which are able to dig about 300 feet per week, to up to 1 mile per week. That’s a 17.6x improvement.

Discussion

Source: [H]ardOCP – Watch Elon Musk’s “Boring” Tunnel System Speed Cars along at 130 MPH

Let's Play PC Games at 8K Resolution

Digital Foundry decided to test the viability of 8K gaming with a GTX 1080 Ti SLI setup, and the lesson seems to be that more VRAM can’t come soon enough. Obviously, gamers can get away with playing at or close to 8K with some thoughtful tweaking of the settings (Battlefield 1 supposedly works great at 7K), but the current hardware lineup merely gives us a compromising taste of what’s to come.



…using today’s top-tier graphics technology, is 8K PC gaming viable? We broke out a pair of Asus Strix GTX 1080 Tis, ran them in SLI and gave it a try. The results were unpredictable, unstable, but at the same time, also quite awe-inspiring. After all, an 8K screen is effectively equivalent to a 2×2 arrangement of ultra HD displays, representing an immense 7680×4320 resolution. To put that into perspective it’s also equivalent to 16 full HD screens lined up in a 4×4 arrangement. To make life a little more complicated, we tested at full 8K, specifically 8192×4320.

Discussion

Source: [H]ardOCP – Let’s Play PC Games at 8K Resolution