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Mar 26, 2024

Characterizing the “Knee” of High-Energy Cosmic Rays

Posted by in categories: particle physics, space

Using observations made with an array of thousands of particle detectors, researchers have uncovered an important clue about cosmic rays that originate from outside of our Galaxy.

Mar 26, 2024

The Sagnac Effect

Posted by in category: futurism

The story of an experiment that might have kept Einstein awake at night—but that paved the way for the dawn of optical gyroscopes and that could enable future gravitational-wave detectors.

Mar 26, 2024

Major Python Infrastructure Breach — Over 170K Users Compromised. How Safe Is Your Code?

Posted by in category: cybercrime/malcode

– Over 170K Users Compromised. How Safe Is Your Code? — Malware — Information Security Newspaper | Hacking News.

Mar 26, 2024

The Looping Attack: Application-Layer Loops as a New DDoS Attack Vector

Posted by in category: cybercrime/malcode

Data security — information security newspaper | hacking news.

Mar 26, 2024

Web-Based PLC Malware: A New Technique to Hack Industrial Control Systems

Posted by in category: cybercrime/malcode

Data security — information security newspaper | hacking news.

Mar 26, 2024

Malicious NuGet Package Linked to Industrial Espionage Targets Developers

Posted by in category: futurism

Suspicious NuGet package ‘SqzrFramework480’ discovered, potentially targeting devs using Chinese industrial tech. Package may be linked to industrial.

Mar 26, 2024

Researchers send data 4.5 million times faster than average broadband

Posted by in category: futurism

Professor Wladek Forysiak from Aston Institute of Photonic Technologies and Dr. Ian Phillips were part of the team that successfully transmitted the data. They worked in collaboration with researchers from the National Institute of Information and Communications Technology (NICT) in Japan and Nokia Bell Labs in the U.S.

As the demand for more data increases, it is expected the newly developed technology will help keep up with future demand. The scientists used optical fibers, small tubular strands of glass that pass information using light. Regular copper cables can’t carry data at such speeds.

The feat was achieved by opening up new wavelength bands that are not yet used in fiber optic systems. Different wavelength bands are equivalent to different colors of light being transmitted down the optical fiber.

Mar 26, 2024

Biology is not as hierarchical as most textbooks paint it

Posted by in categories: biological, finance, food, robotics/AI

The dangers of AI farming.

AI could lead to new ways for people to abuse animals for financial gain. That’s why we need strong ethical guidelines.

Virginie Simoneau-Gilbert & Jonathan Birch.

Mar 26, 2024

Physicists Can Now Control Lightning Using Laser Beams, Making Advanced Protection Systems

Posted by in categories: climatology, physics

Swiss physicists have achieved a groundbreaking breakthrough in lightning control using laser beams, which could lead to advanced lightning protection systems for critical infrastructure such as airports and rocket launch sites, Science reports.

The study, led by scientists at the École Polytechnique and the University of Geneva, successfully demonstrated the ability to steer lightning using high-powered lasers. This expensive breakthrough could offer enhanced protection against lightning strikes, which can cause significant damage and pose risks to human safety.

Mar 26, 2024

Scientists can’t decide if consciousness is real or fake

Posted by in categories: neuroscience, quantum physics

What if everything in our world has a soul and mind? What if every desk, chair, and potted plant has a conscious stream of thoughts? That’s the basic idea behind Panpsychism, a theory first put forward in the late 16th century by Francesco Patrizi. It’s been a hundred years or so since science won out about this theory in the 1920s, but now it’s regaining momentum.

To understand why this theory is regaining popularity requires us to look at one of the most difficult conundrums that human scientists have ever faced: where consciousness comes from. Scientists have been trying to solve this hard problem for over a hundred years, and while developments in neuroscience, psychology, and quantum physics have come far, we still don’t have a definitive answer.

The argument is regaining momentum, though, thanks in part to the work of Italian neuroscientist and psychiatrist Giulio Tononi, who proposed the idea that there is widespread consciousness even found in the simplest of systems. Tononi and American neuroscientist Christof Koch argued that consciousness will follow where there are organized lumps of matter. Some even believe that the stars may be conscious.

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