bitwraith writes: "A hacker has breached and stolen customer data from TeleMessage, an obscure Israeli company that sells modified versions of Signal and other messaging apps to the U.S. government to archive messages, 404 Media has learned. The data stolen by the hacker contains the contents of some direct messages and group chats sent using its Signal clone, as well as modified versions of WhatsApp, Telegram, and WeChat. TeleMessage was recently the center of a wave of media coverage after Mike Waltz accidentally revealed he used the tool in a cabinet meeting with President Trump."
Note for the editor: The above is an exact quote from the article, except for hyperlinks. It would probably be appropriate to replace, "bitwraith writes:" with, "bitwraith shares an article from 404media:"
I have found a few videos online explaining the installation, but has anyone just recorded a few minutes of what it sounds like, for those of us too far away to visit? Perhaps someone will reply to this with a helpful link...
What about small breeds with already long lifespans like chihuahuas? Would that be a diminishing return, or show greater benefits? (assuming for the sake of argument that the drug even works)
Lately I have been waiting for games to drop Denuvo. Why pay money for bugs and invasion of privacy that will resolve themselves when the developer changes their mind?
Batteries in EVs are exposed to temperature extremes even when idle, due to hot summer and cold winter weather. IIRC, EVs (ex. Teslas) actually have temperature controls for the batteries to minimize the wear involved.
Have these new batteries been studied operating in extreme temperatures? Do they last longer in such less-than-ideal conditions as well? I'm mostly interested in the implications for winter driving range.
Didn't the window for DMCA exemptions just close without any new protections for gaming/emulation? The timing of a new way to monetize game music is supicious, given that Nintendo has to still make money off of these things to enforce some of their IPs.
I hope sites like vgmusic.com and ocremix.org are ready for a fight, since Nintendo seems poised to torch their own legacy again.
bitwraith writes: According to CNN, 2800 people in Lebanon were injured, and 8 killed, when pagers began exploding. Lebanese state media alleges that the pagers were sabotaged remotely by hackers. Video online purports to show a pager exploding in a man's bag while he is buying groceries. The explosions appear to have targeted two cities described as strongholds of Hezbolla, Ali Al-Nahri and Riyaq.
Nvidia has a history of limiting software compatibility to give themselves an unfair advantage (havoc buyout, etc.). It's not hard to argue that they have probably done that again with the compute APIs that most AI software is using.
The reality is that antitrust regulation has been lacking for 20 years. Now that we have an AG who is actually paying attention, lots of antitrust cases that have been ignored in the recent past could be brought now. I'm just surprised this was the breaking point for Microsoft.
This is basically the same arrangement that Renault had with Smart from like 2014-2020, until Smart partnered with Geely. Smart 453s were built at Renault factories, sharing parts with the Twingo, with Smart's badge and chassis.
I didn't realize Renault started looking for a new partner to continue this. Are they just trying all of the German car companies? Are we going to get tiny two-seater BMWs next? Electric Isetta reboot?
Wasn't Hulu the service that actually gave statements that password sharing does not matter? I distinctly recall them being listed online among services that don't care about password sharing.
At the risk of spoiling the ending... In the game people die of a malfunction, and you spend the rest of the game investigating what happened. It's a cautionary tale, like much science fiction.