RansomHouse Extortion Group Claims AMD as Its Latest Victim

AMD said it is investigating a potential data breach after RansomHouse, a relatively new data cybercrime operation, claims to have extorted data from the U.S. chipmaker. From a report: An AMD spokesperson told TechCrunch that the company “is aware of a bad actor claiming to be in possession of stolen data,” adding that “an investigation is currently underway.” RansomHouse, which earlier this month claimed responsibility for a cyberattack on Shoprite, Africa’s largest retailer, claims to have breached AMD on January 5 to steal 450 GB of data. The group claims to be targeting companies with weak security, and claimed it was able to compromise AMD due to the use of weak passwords throughout the organization.

“An era of high-end technology, progress and top security… there’s so much in these words for the crowds. But it seems those are still just beautiful words when even technology giants like AMD use simple passwords to protect their networks from intrusion,” RansomHouse wrote on its data leak site. “It is a shame those are real passwords used by AMD employees, but a bigger shame to AMD Security Department which gets significant financing according to the documents we got our hands on — all thanks to these passwords.” Brett Callow, a ransomware expert and threat analyst at Emsisoft, told TechCrunch there’s no reason to doubt the group’s claims.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.



Source: Slashdot – RansomHouse Extortion Group Claims AMD as Its Latest Victim

Russia fines Airbnb, Twitch and Pinterest for not storing data locally

Russia has fined Airbnb, Twitch and Pinterest for violating the country’s personal data legislation, Reuters reports. On Tuesday, a court in Moscow ordered all three companies to pay fines of 2 million roubles (approximately $37,700) for not storing the data of Russian citizens within the country. The decision came after Russia’s Roskomnadzor internet commission opened administrative cases against the three platforms in May. Airbnb, Twitch and Pinterest did not immediately respond to Engadget’s request for comment.

In the years to Russia’s invasion of Ukraine on February 24th, US tech firms would sporadically attract the attention of Russian regulators, leading to conflicts over the country’s approach to content, censorship and local data representation. Since the war began, those disputes have intensified in both frequency and severity as the west has moved to punish Russia for the war. In May, for instance, Google’s Russian division filed for bankruptcy after authorities seized its bank account. The search giant said the move had made it “untenable” for the office to pay employees and suppliers.



Source: Engadget – Russia fines Airbnb, Twitch and Pinterest for not storing data locally

New trailer offers first hint at Return to Monkey Island’s story

When Ron Gilbert and Dave Grossman spoke to Ars in April, shortly after the surprise announcement of Return to Monkey Island, they weren’t ready to discuss details on where the franchise’s story would be going after LeChuck’s Revenge. Today, though, a new trailer and marketing materials for the game give us our first hints of what Guybrush Threepwood himself says is “a story about the time I finally found the secret of Monkey Island” (and the first mention of a Switch version, which will be a console exclusive).

It is “many years” after Guybrush’s last encounter with zombie pirate LeChuck, and “Guybrush himself is adrift and unfulfilled” as “Melee Island has taken a turn for the worse,” according to the game’s official website. Love interest Elaine Marley “has turned her focus away from governing,” while a “hip, young” Captain Madison and his pirate crew “have shuffled the old guard from power.” Manic salesman Stan, meanwhile, has been imprisoned for “marketing related crimes,” which you can learn more about in an interactive conversation on the game’s website (something “non-fungible” may have played a role…).

All those characters and more show up in the trailer, which features signs of inter-ship cannon battles and plenty of sword fighting (no explicit signs of insults amid the sword fighting in the trailer, but we have to imagine we’ll see some of that). Amid scenes depicting plenty of scrapes for Guybrush, there’s also a brief hint that Elaine may be playable at some point in the game.

Read 3 remaining paragraphs | Comments



Source: Ars Technica – New trailer offers first hint at Return to Monkey Island’s story

USA's Docked Cygnus Spacecraft Successfully Maneuvers ISS in Important Reboosting Test

NASA is breathing a sigh of relief following a successful demonstration in which a docked Cygnus freighter was temporarily converted into a booster engine for the International Space Station. The favorable test suggests NASA has the means to adjust the space station’s orbit should Russia decide to leave the orbital…

Read more…



Source: Gizmodo – USA’s Docked Cygnus Spacecraft Successfully Maneuvers ISS in Important Reboosting Test

NASA Launches CAPSTONE Mission to Begin Its Return to the Moon

A small microwave oven-sized spacecraft is on its way to the Moon, setting the stage for a sustained human presence on the lunar surface. NASA launched its CAPSTONE satellite on Tuesday, in a unique mission to test out a highly elliptical orbit around the Moon as part of the agency’s Artemis program.

Read more…



Source: Gizmodo – NASA Launches CAPSTONE Mission to Begin Its Return to the Moon

India Delays VPN Rules To Log Customers Data by 3 Months

India will give VPN providers and cloud service operators an additional three months to comply with new rules that require they maintain names and addresses of their customers and their IP addresses, delivering some relief to firms as many scramble to follow the new guidelines and others explore exiting the South Asian market. From a report: The Indian Computer Emergency Response Team, the body appointed by the government to protect India’s information infrastructure, said Monday evening it is extending the enforcement of the new rules to September 25. The rules, unveiled in late April, was set to go into effect Monday. Its announcement follows sharp criticism from VPN providers, many of which including Nord and ExpressVPN have announced their intentions to remove local servers in the country in recent weeks. […] CERT’s new directions require “virtual private server (VPS) providers, cloud service providers, VPN service providers, virtual asset service providers, virtual asset exchange providers, custodian wallet providers and government organisations” to store customers’ names, email addresses, IP addresses, know-your-customer records and financial transactions for a period of five years.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.



Source: Slashdot – India Delays VPN Rules To Log Customers Data by 3 Months

Edible Things You Should Never Actually Eat

When I was very (very) young, I ate an entire box of crayons in the hope of having multi-colored poop. It did not work, but it did cause my mother a few hours of mild distress as she worried what might happen to me. The answer (disappointingly) was nothing. I didn’t extrude a rainbow, nor did I die horribly from…

Read more…



Source: LifeHacker – Edible Things You Should Never Actually Eat

Portal: The Companion Collection Out On Switch Today

Just when you thought you were finally safe from that guy making “the cake is a lie” jokes (before misquoting some Monty Python), Valve has surprise-launched the Switch port of both Portal and Portal 2 today. Announced during the very Mini Nintendo Direct, the 2007 smash hit puzzle game should be on your handheld’s…

Read more…



Source: Kotaku – Portal: The Companion Collection Out On Switch Today

MNT shrinks its open source Reform laptop into a 7-inch pocket PC throwback

MNT's "Pocket Reform" is the same open hardware in a smaller enclosure.

Enlarge / MNT’s “Pocket Reform” is the same open hardware in a smaller enclosure. (credit: MNT)

A few months ago, we reviewed the MNT Reform, which attempts to bring the dream of entirely open source hardware to an audience that doesn’t want to design and build a laptop totally from scratch. Now, MNT is bringing its open-hardware ethos to a second PC, a 7-inch “Pocket Reform” laptop that recalls the design of old clamshell Pocket PCs, just like the big Reform references the design of chunky ’90s ThinkPads.

The Pocket Reform borrows many of the big Reform laptop’s design impulses, including a low-profile mechanical keyboard and trackball-based pointing device and a chunky, retro-throwback design. The device includes a 7-inch 1080p screen, a pair of USB-C ports (one of which is used for charging), a microSD slot for storage expansion, and a micro HDMI port for connecting to a display when you’re at your desk.

The full-size Reform is an interesting exercise in open source hardware and software, though a computer built around openness makes a lot of compromises that you don’t have to make with a “closed” system. Our main complaint about the big Reform was its miserably slow ARM processor, which won’t change for the Pocket Reform even though MNT continues to work on slightly more powerful processor options. You’ll at least be able to augment the device’s default 802.11ac Wi-Fi with a cellular modem and SIM card.

Read 2 remaining paragraphs | Comments



Source: Ars Technica – MNT shrinks its open source Reform laptop into a 7-inch pocket PC throwback

Google is trying to keep political campaign emails out of Gmail spam folders

Google is working on a way to ensure emails from US political campaigns reach users’ Gmail inboxes instead of automatically getting dumped into the spam folder. The company has asked the Federal Election Commission for approval on a plan to make emails from “authorized candidate committees, political party committees and leadership political action committees registered with the FEC” exempt from spam detection, as long they abide by Gmail’s rules on phishing, malware and illegal content.

“We want Gmail to provide a great experience for all of our users, including minimizing unwanted email, but we do not filter emails based on political affiliation,” Google spokesperson José Castañeda told Axios, which first reported on the move. Castañeda added that the pilot program “may help improve inboxing rates for political bulk senders and provide more transparency into email deliverability, while still letting users protect their inboxes by unsubscribing or labeling emails as spam.”

If the project goes ahead, users will see a prominent notification the first time they receive an email from a campaign. They’ll be asked if they want to keep receiving such emails. They’ll be able to opt out of campaign notices later too. That should help cut down on unwanted campaign emails, especially for users who didn’t sign up to receive them in the first place, while making sure they still hit inboxes.

Google has noted that a key reason why Gmail puts many campaign emails in the spam folder is because other users often mark the missives as spam. A North Carolina State University study from earlier this year found that Gmail was more likely than Yahoo (Engadget’s parent company) and Microsoft Outlook to algorithmically filter emails from Republican campaigns as spam during the 2020 campaign.

Republican leaders this month introduced a bill that seeks to make it illegal for email service providers to automatically put campaign messages in the spam folder. It would also require operators to issue a quarterly transparency report detailing how many times campaign messages were flagged as spam, with breakdowns for emails from both the Republican and Democratic parties. In addition, providers would have to disclose the tools they use to determine which campaign emails to mark as spam.



Source: Engadget – Google is trying to keep political campaign emails out of Gmail spam folders

Amazon Could Host Two Prime Day Deal Events This Year, What You Need To Know

Amazon Could Host Two Prime Day Deal Events This Year, What You Need To Know
Summertime in North America ushers in beach days, BBQ’s, and– Amazon Prime deals? Most are now fairly familiar with the concept of Amazon Prime Day. The event has been a summer staple for several years. However, it is possible that Prime Day may soon occur more than once a year. Rumor has it that Amazon may host two separate Prime Day events

Source: Hot Hardware – Amazon Could Host Two Prime Day Deal Events This Year, What You Need To Know

Maternal Deaths Spiked In US During First Year of the Pandemic, Study Finds

The first year of the pandemic in America saw a startling and disproportionate rise in maternal mortality, according to new research released Tuesday. In 2020, the study found, deaths during or soon after pregnancy rose even higher than the spike in mortality seen nationwide. This jump in mortality was felt hardest…

Read more…



Source: Gizmodo – Maternal Deaths Spiked In US During First Year of the Pandemic, Study Finds

Climate change is altering the chemistry of wine

Read 58 remaining paragraphs | Comments



Source: Ars Technica – Climate change is altering the chemistry of wine

Should You Use This Encrypted Period Tracking App?

A period-tracking company proclaimed last week that it was dedicated to protecting women’s data rather than sharing it with cops in a post-Roe v Wade world. Stardust, a woman-owned period-tracking app, announced that it would be the first company of its kind to roll out end-to-end encryption. E2E limits data’s…

Read more…



Source: Gizmodo – Should You Use This Encrypted Period Tracking App?

Nier: Automata Hits Nintendo Switch On October 6

Nintendo announced today during its Mini Direct Partner Showcase that PlatinumGames’ moody action-RPG Nier: Automata is coming to the Switch on October 6. Dubbed The End of YoRHa Edition, this launch will include previously released add-ons such as the “3C3C1D119440927″ DLC as well as new console-exclusive…

Read more…



Source: Kotaku – Nier: Automata Hits Nintendo Switch On October 6

Install Firefox 102 on Ubuntu, Linux Mint, Alma Linux & Fedora

This tutorial will be helpful for beginners to download firefox and install Firefox 102 on Ubuntu 22.04 LTS, Ubuntu 20.04, LinuxMint 20.3, Rocky Linux 8, Alma Linux 9, and Fedora 36.

The post Install Firefox 102 on Ubuntu, Linux Mint, Alma Linux & Fedora appeared first on Linux Today.



Source: Linux Today – Install Firefox 102 on Ubuntu, Linux Mint, Alma Linux & Fedora