Menu

Blog

Page 1406

Oct 20, 2023

Slime that can be controlled by a magnetic field can navigate tight spaces and grasp objects

Posted by in category: futurism

It could be used inside the body to perform tasks like retrieving objects swallowed by accident.

Oct 20, 2023

Discord: A Playground for Nation-State Hackers Targeting Critical Infrastructure

Posted by in categories: cybercrime/malcode, evolution, internet

đŸ•”ïžâ€â™‚ïž Nation-state hackers are turning to Discord. Discover how they’re using this social platform for potential cyber-espionage and target critical infrastructure.

Read:


In what’s the latest evolution of threat actors abusing legitimate infrastructure for nefarious ends, new findings show that nation-state hacking groups have entered the fray in leveraging the social platform for targeting critical infrastructure.

Continue reading “Discord: A Playground for Nation-State Hackers Targeting Critical Infrastructure” »

Oct 20, 2023

New Admin Takeover Vulnerability Exposed in Synology’s DiskStation Manager

Posted by in categories: cybercrime/malcode, futurism

A vulnerability in Synology’s DSM has been revealed, allowing attackers to remotely hijack admin accounts.

Learn how to safeguard your data:

Oct 20, 2023

Zero-Day Alert: Thousands of Cisco IOS XE Systems Now Compromised

Posted by in category: cybercrime/malcode

Zero-day alert: 10K cisco IOS XE systems now compromised:


Just a day after Cisco disclosed CVE-2023–20198, it remains unpatched, and one vendor says a Shodan scan shows at least 10,000 Cisco devices with an implant for arbitrary code execution on them. The vendor meanwhile has updated the advisory with more mitigation steps.

Oct 20, 2023

Lazarus Group Targeting Defense Experts with Fake Interviews via Trojanized VNC Apps

Posted by in category: cybercrime/malcode

🚹 Korean hacking group Lazarus Group targets defense industry and nuclear engineers with fake job interviews, using trojanized VNC apps to steal data and execute commands.

Oct 20, 2023

‘Etherhiding’ Blockchain Technique Hides Malware in WordPress Sites

Posted by in categories: blockchains, cryptocurrencies, cybercrime/malcode

‘Etherhiding’ Blockchain Technique Hides Malicious Code in WordPress Sites: https://informatech.co/3S3tw


A threat actor has been abusing proprietary blockchain technology to hide malicious code in a campaign that uses fake browser updates to spread various malware, including the infostealers RedLine, Amadey, and Lumma.

While abuse of blockchain is typically seen in attacks aimed at stealing cryptocurrency — as the security technology is best known for protecting these transactions — EtherHiding demonstrates how attackers can leverage it for other types of malicious activity.

Continue reading “‘Etherhiding’ Blockchain Technique Hides Malware in WordPress Sites” »

Oct 20, 2023

Gilead Sciences researchers collected data

Posted by in categories: business, computing, military, neuroscience

From every study they could find, including research that was never published, research by the military and private businesses, and research that had sat dormant on hard drives for decades to find out how personality and intelligence relate to each another.⁠
⁠
Fourteen years later, the massive data catalog has dropped. It contains 79 personality traits and 97 cognitive abilities from 1,300 studies from over 50 countries including over 2 million participants. And an early meta-analysis published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences shows that personality and intelligence relate in some surprising ways.⁠
⁠
Personality describes how someone generally thinks, feels, and behaves. Intelligence (termed cognitive ability by the researchers) describes how well someone can understand and apply information.⁠
⁠
Here are 3 of the 5 findings:⁠
⁠
1. Extraversion, a measure of sociality and enthusiasm, was only negligibly related to intelligence overall. However, the activity facet more strongly correlated, and (surprisingly) sociability had a small negative relationship with some cognitive abilities. ⁠
⁠
2. Neuroticism encompasses negative emotionality, which can inhibit advanced thinking. Despite the trope of the moody genius, perhaps it’s no surprise that higher levels of neuroticism predicted lower levels of intelligence, albeit weakly. The uneven temper and depression facets were particularly strong predictors of decreased intelligence. ⁠
⁠
3. Conscientiousness, a measure of self-regulation and orderliness, correlated positively with intelligence overall. But some facets, including cautiousness and routine seeking, predicted lower cognitive abilities.⁠
⁠
For the rest of the findings, along with something interesting they learned about extraversion, click here: https://www.freethink.com/society/study-personality-intellig
jjjrtebdkm.

Article by Elizabeth Gilbert.

Oct 20, 2023

Researchers have demonstrated that they can mimic what would happen if one could travel back in time by playing with entanglement

Posted by in category: futurism

https://ie.social/NYB0d

Oct 20, 2023

Researchers Develop Possible Solution to Disinformation

Posted by in categories: blockchains, engineering

This post is also available in: he ŚąŚ‘ŚšŚ™ŚȘ (Hebrew)

Researchers from the University of Waterloo’s Faculty of Engineering are developing a first-of-its-kind innovative system against fake news that relies on blockchain. Their goal? A world where people have greater trust in the news they see and hear.

It is already known that disinformation – especially digitally created – poses a great threat to democracy. There is evidence fake news could have influenced important world events like Brexit, the 2016 US elections, the Russia-Ukraine war, etc. Big tech companies like Facebook and Google have been trying to establish policies to prevent the spread of disinformation on their platforms, with limited success.

Oct 20, 2023

Chatbot Offers Roadmap for How to Conduct a Bio Weapons Attack

Posted by in categories: biological, chemistry, information science, robotics/AI

Jailbroken large language models (LLMs) and generative AI chatbots — the kind any hacker can access on the open Web — are capable of providing in-depth, accurate instructions for carrying out large-scale acts of destruction, including bio-weapons attacks.

An alarming new study from RAND, the US nonprofit think tank, offers a canary in the coal mine for how bad actors might weaponize this technology in the (possibly near) future.

In an experiment, experts asked an uncensored LLM to plot out theoretical biological weapons attacks against large populations. The AI algorithm was detailed in its response and more than forthcoming in its advice on how to cause the most damage possible, and acquire relevant chemicals without raising suspicion.