Gov. Parson Says He Believes Prosecutor Will Bring Charges Against Reporter For Using 'View Source'

Gov. Mike Parson this week expressed his opinion the Cole County prosecuting attorney would bring charges in the case of a Post-Dispatch reporter who alerted the state to a significant data vulnerability. From a report: “I don’t think that’ll be the case,” Parson said when asked what he would do if the prosecutor didn’t pursue the case. “That’s up to the prosecutor; that’s his job to do.” Parson referenced a state statute on computer tampering, which says a person commits the offense if they “knowingly and without authorization or without reasonable grounds to believe that he has such authorization” modifies or destroys data, discloses or takes data, or accesses a computer network and intentionally examines personal information. “If somebody picks your lock on your house — for whatever reason, it’s not a good lock, it’s a cheap lock or whatever problem you might have — they do not have the right to go into your house and take anything that belongs to you,” Parson said.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.



Source: Slashdot – Gov. Parson Says He Believes Prosecutor Will Bring Charges Against Reporter For Using ‘View Source’

'Critical' Polygon Bug Put $24 Billion in Tokens at Risk Until Recent Hard Fork

Ethereum scaling project Polygon was at risk of losing nearly all of its MATIC tokens until it upgraded its network earlier this month. From a report The problem was a “critical” vulnerability in Polygon’s proof-of-stake genesis contract, which could have allowed attackers to steal over 9.2 billion MATIC tokens (currently worth over $24 billion). The total supply of MATIC tokens is 10 billion. The vulnerability was reported on the bug bounty platform Immunefi by a whitehat hacker known as Leon Spacewalker. According to details shared Wednesday, the bug essentially could have allowed attackers to arbitrarily mint all of Polygon’s more than 9.2 billion MATIC tokens from its MRC20 contract. After Spacewalker found the bug, Immunefi informed the Polygon team the same day. The team then confirmed the vulnerability and moved to update the Polygon network, initially with an update for its Mumbai testnet. According to Polygon, the testnet update was completed on December 4, and the team was preparing for the mainnet upgrade. Yet before the mainnet upgrade was undertaken, a malicious actor exploited the bug and stole 801,601 MATIC tokens (currently worth over $2 million). Polygon has said it will bear the cost of the theft.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.



Source: Slashdot – ‘Critical’ Polygon Bug Put Billion in Tokens at Risk Until Recent Hard Fork

postmarketOS 21.12 Brings Support for More Devices, GNOME 41 Apps, and Sxmo on Wayland

It’s been six months after postmarketOS 21.06, so it’s time for another hefty update that brings support for more devices, the latest mobile desktop environments, improvements, bug fixes, and up-to-date components. Here is postmarketOS 21.12, based on Alpine Linux 3.15.

Source: LXer – postmarketOS 21.12 Brings Support for More Devices, GNOME 41 Apps, and Sxmo on Wayland

How (and Why) The Witcher Unleashed the Wild Hunt

If you watched the finale of The Witcher’s second season, you got a good look at what will be season three’s new villains—the Wild Hunt, a group of seven spectral riders on skeletal horses who travel through the sky and are deadset (pun obviously intended) on capturing Princess Ciri and magic-granting Elder blood.…

Read more…



Source: Gizmodo – How (and Why) The Witcher Unleashed the Wild Hunt

AvosLocker Ransomware Gang Mistakenly Hits Police Dept. And Backs Down But Why?

AvosLocker Ransomware Gang Mistakenly Hits Police Dept. And Backs Down But Why?
You may not be aware of this, faithful HotHardware reader, but ransomware attacks are rarely random. More commonly, it’s an operator within a group who targets a specific organization or network looking for a hefty payout. One such group is the organization AvosLocker, who uses a tool by the same name to encrypt vulnerable systems and then

Source: Hot Hardware – AvosLocker Ransomware Gang Mistakenly Hits Police Dept. And Backs Down But Why?

The Entire Tomb Raider Reboot Trilogy Is Free Right Now, Here's How To Claim

The Entire Tomb Raider Reboot Trilogy Is Free Right Now, Here's How To Claim
Today marks the final day of Epic’s holiday free games offer, and it is ending the promotion with a mighty big bang. As in, you can claim not just a single title today, but all three Tomb Raider games that are part of the reboot trilogy. There’s even some DLC sprinkled in. If you missed out on the trilogy (or just want to own the games on

Source: Hot Hardware – The Entire Tomb Raider Reboot Trilogy Is Free Right Now, Here’s How To Claim

Galaxy Z Flip3 Foldable Is Proving A Bigger Draw For Samsung's Brand Than Galaxy S21

Galaxy Z Flip3 Foldable Is Proving A Bigger Draw For Samsung's Brand Than Galaxy S21
The foldable smartphone innovation has evidently been garnering the purchases of more users in the past year. Samsung says that its Galaxy Flip3 motivated more people to switch than its flagship Galaxy S21 in 2021.

Foldable smartphones have improved since they first debuted a couple of years ago with better screen endurance and performance.

Source: Hot Hardware – Galaxy Z Flip3 Foldable Is Proving A Bigger Draw For Samsung’s Brand Than Galaxy S21

NASA-funded Program Recruited Religious Experts To Predict How Humans May React To Aliens

Two dozen theologians participated in a program funded partially by NASA to research how humans may react to news that intelligent life exists on other planets, according to one religious scholar who says he was recruited. From a report: The Rev. Dr. Andrew Davison, of the University of Cambridge, told the Times UK in a recent interview that he was among 23 other theologians in a NASA-sponsored program at the Center for Theological Inquiry at Princeton University from 2016 to 2017. Davison said he and his colleagues examined how each of the world’s major religions would likely respond if they were made aware of the existence of aliens. His own work focused on the connection between astrobiology and Christian theology. Will Storrar, director of the CTI, said NASA wanted to see “serious scholarship being published in books and journals” addressing the “profound wonder and mystery and implication of finding microbial life on another planet,” the Times reported.

[…] NASA’s Astrobiology program provided partial funding through a grant to the CTI in 2015, with the agency-funded portion of the project concluding in 2017, a NASA spokesperson confirmed to Changing America. NASA was not directly involved in the selection of researchers for the study.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.



Source: Slashdot – NASA-funded Program Recruited Religious Experts To Predict How Humans May React To Aliens

Trans Jeopardy! Champ Breaks Records, Becomes Highest-Earning Woman In Show History

Last Friday, Amy Schneider became the highest-earning woman in the history of the quiz show Jeopardy! That makes her the fourth-highest-earning contestant overall for regular season games, and fifth for overall winnings. After her latest game yesterday, she’s tied with Julia Collins, who had a 20-day win streak in…

Read more…



Source: Kotaku – Trans Jeopardy! Champ Breaks Records, Becomes Highest-Earning Woman In Show History

GameStop's PlayStation 5 Restock Could Be Your Last Chance To Score One This Year

GameStop's PlayStation 5 Restock Could Be Your Last Chance To Score One This Year
Time is running out to snatch up a PlayStation 5 console before the end of the year, as 2022 is breathing heavily down our necks at this point. Getting one before the calendar flips over to a new year is an arbitrary goal, though if that is what you are trying to do, hitting up your local GameStop might be your best and last shot.

Like

Source: Hot Hardware – GameStop’s PlayStation 5 Restock Could Be Your Last Chance To Score One This Year

The 'Tomb Raider' reboot trilogy is free on the Epic Games Store

Free game promos are easy to find, but Epic is going one step further by offering an entire game trilogy for no charge. The Epic Games Store is offering all three Tomb Raider reboot titles (Tomb Raider, Rise of the Tomb Raider and Shadow of the Tomb Raider) for free between now and January 6th at 11AM. They’re Windows-only if you grab them from the EGS, but they’re also complete versions that include post-launch DLC.

Your experience with the games may vary. Some will highlight Rise of the Tomb Raider as the star of the series, and aren’t always enthusiastic about Shadow. And expect to do a lot of crafting in between adventures. They’re solid releases as a whole, though, and represented a return to form for a franchise that many felt had lost its way. At the least, they’ll serve as good training tools for Uncharted‘s eventual PC launch.



Source: Engadget – The ‘Tomb Raider’ reboot trilogy is free on the Epic Games Store

ASUS Demonstrates DDR5 to DDR4 Converter Card

One of the key issues with purchasing a modern Alder Lake system today is the cost of the memory, especially when an enthusiast wants to use DDR5. Due to component shortages, particularly the power management controllers that each DDR5 module needs, costs of DDR5 are quickly rising, with some scalpers looking for $1000+ for basic memory kits. The solution to this has been to recommend that users look to pair Alder Lake with DDR4 memory, which although it isn’t the latest, is the more cost effective scenario. The downside to this solution is that the user has a DDR4-only motherboard, and not the next generation DDR5. That might become a solved issue soon enough, however.


In a preview video on YouTube posted today by Bing, who I believe is an ASUS ROG employee, the company has been working on a solution to allow users that buy ASUS Z690 motherboards built on DDR5, to run DDR4 in them. Because Intel limited the platform to either DDR5 or DDR4 per motherboard, there’s no way to run both, until now. In the video, Bing describes the new add-in card they’ve been prototyping.



The use case is fairly simple – have a DDR5 board like the ROG Apex, put the carrier card in a memory slot, and place the qualified DDR4 in the top.


Obviously, the situation here is more complex than simply using this carrier card. DDR5 and DDR4 are more than simply a notch difference between them – DDR4 is a single 64-bit memory channel per module, while DDR5 is dual 32-bit channel per module. The key issue is that DDR5 does power management per module, where DDR4 relies on power management on the motherboard, so that has to be taken into consideration. Also, adding in a carrier card extends memory traces, which could degrade the quality of the signal.



What ASUS does here is use a special BIOS revision to allow the ROG Apex DDR5 to run in DDR4 mode. This means that the traces to the memory slots, although laid out for DDR5 operation, are switched into DDR4 mode. Then, on the carrier card, this takes the 5V power signal and runs it through the equivalent of motherboard power management, and controls the data lines to maintain integrity for signal, latency, power, etc.


Bing explains in the video that this is still very much a prototype. It looks like they’re focusing to get it to work on one motherboard with one memory kit first, before optimizing it. Bing states that the carrier card is very tall, and there is room for optimization to make it smaller in the future before ASUS might offer it as a retail product. Also a wider range of validation is likely needed as well.



The video goes to show with a single DDR4 module in the carrier card the system running at DDR4-4400 with a Core i5-12600K. To confirm DDR5 still works, the system is shown running dual modules of DDR5-4400, at least to the BIOS screen. If these modules come to market, they are still in early prototypes, and ASUS will likely judge feasibility and demand for them for pricing.


Source: YouTube (in Mandarin)



Source: AnandTech – ASUS Demonstrates DDR5 to DDR4 Converter Card

South Korea Asks App Stores to Abolish 'Play-To-Earn' Crypto Games

Play-to-earn (P2E) games where users trade their playtime for crypto earnings are the latest trend to take the crypto community by storm, and the latest subject of a crackdown over in South Korea. Regional newswire Naver was first to report that South Korean authorities have asked Apple and Google to block these games’…

Read more…



Source: Gizmodo – South Korea Asks App Stores to Abolish ‘Play-To-Earn’ Crypto Games

13 of the Best TV Show Episodes of 2021, According to the Lifehacker Staff

As I reflect back on 2021, I find my TV-watching to be found wanting. It’s not that I didn’t have options. Between my own accounts and those I share with my parents and brother, I have, at any given time, access to Amazon Prime Video, Netflix, Disney+, Hulu, HBO Max, and Paramount+. And I’m probably forgetting one.…

Read more…



Source: LifeHacker – 13 of the Best TV Show Episodes of 2021, According to the Lifehacker Staff

End of the line finally coming for BlackBerry devices

The Blackberry Torch, the company's first touchscreen phone, is held for display during its debut in New York in 2010.

Enlarge / The Blackberry Torch, the company’s first touchscreen phone, is held for display during its debut in New York in 2010. (credit: Bloomberg | Getty Images)

BlackBerry, the company that once dominated smart mobile devices, recently announced that it was finally discontinuing key services that support its phones. As of January 4th, the phones will no longer be provided with provisioning services, meaning that they will gradually lose the ability to join networks, including the cellular network.

It may seem difficult to imagine if you weren’t using cell phones at the time, but BlackBerry once dominated the smartphone market. Its keyboard-based hardware was widely adopted in corporate settings, in part because the services it provided typically ran through BlackBerry servers, allowing for high levels of security and control. An indication of its importance is that early internal builds of Android looked like a cheap BlackBerry knockoff, rather than the cheap iPhone knockoff that was eventually released.

Unlike the people who developed Android, BlackBerry’s leadership was blindsided by the iPhone’s popularity. It dismissed on-screen keyboards, and counted on its stranglehold on corporate services to maintain its market. It took over a year after the iPhone’s release for the company to come out with its own touch screen phone, and its software remained an awkward mix of old and new for some time after. In the mean time, corporate users fell in love with their Apple and Android phones, and compelled their IT departments to support them.

Read 4 remaining paragraphs | Comments



Source: Ars Technica – End of the line finally coming for BlackBerry devices

Star Trek: Discovery Preaches Connection as It Drives Its Biggest Relationship Apart

Star Trek: Discovery’s fourth season, much like the seasons that came before it, has put a lot of emphasis on the idea that perhaps the most important ideal any of its heroes, Federation or otherwise, could hold is a sense of unity and communal understanding. As it heads into a surprise mid-season hiatus this week, it…

Read more…



Source: Gizmodo – Star Trek: Discovery Preaches Connection as It Drives Its Biggest Relationship Apart

Intel Is Bringing A Feature Upgrade To Linux That Will Make Windows Users Jealous

Intel Is Bringing A Feature Upgrade To Linux That Will Make Windows Users Jealous
Ever since BIOS updates became possible, the process required rebooting the PC. Even when motherboard manufacturers moved completely to UEFI, this remained the case. Intel is now changing that, thanks to a new part of the ACPI specification called Platform Firmware Runtime Update and Telemetry (PFRUT). This allows for firmware updates to a

Source: Hot Hardware – Intel Is Bringing A Feature Upgrade To Linux That Will Make Windows Users Jealous