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Nov 8, 2021

US government offers $10 million bounty for information on Colonial Pipeline hackers

Posted by in categories: cybercrime/malcode, energy, government

Fighting ransomware with bounties.


In May, a ransomware attack shut down a pipeline carrying 45 percent of the fuel used on the US East Coast. The Colonial Pipeline incident led to panic buying and heightened fears about the threat posed by simple hacks to national infrastructure. Now, the US State Department is offering a bounty of up to $10 million to anyone who can supply the “identity or location” of the leaders of the group responsible — an outfit known as DarkSide.

In addition to the $10 million bounty, the state department is offering a reward of up to $5 million for information leading to the arrest or conviction “of any individual conspiring to participate in or attempting to participate in a DarkSide variant ransomware incident.” What exactly that means isn’t clear. Is a “DarkSide variant ransomware incident” one that involves the group’s hacking tools? What if the software has been altered slightly? It seems deliberately ambiguous, allowing the State Department to cast as wide a net as possible.

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Nov 8, 2021

Quantifying Biological Age: Blood Test #5 in 2021

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, life extension

Join us on Patreon!
https://www.patreon.com/MichaelLustgartenPhD

Links to biological age calculators:
Levine’s PhenoAge calculator is embedded as an Excel file:

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Nov 8, 2021

Tesla’s Hidden Billionaire: How a Retail Trader Made $7 Billion

Posted by in category: Elon Musk

Singapore-based Leo KoGuan — who picked up stock trading in 2019 — has quietly amassed one of the single biggest stakes in Elon Musk’s company.

Nov 8, 2021

From Renaissance to Space Age. Prof. Marie-Luise on history of space philosophy

Posted by in category: space

Mon, Nov 15 at 12 PM PST.


Interested.

Nov 8, 2021

Non-toxic technology extracts more gold from ore

Posted by in categories: chemistry, engineering, space

Gold is one of the world’s most popular metals. Malleable, conductive and non-corrosive, it’s used in jewelry, electronics, and even space exploration. But traditional gold production typically involves a famous toxin, cyanide, which has been banned for industrial use in several countries.

The wait for a scalable non-toxic alternative may now be over as a research team from Aalto University in Finland has successfully replaced cyanide in a key part of gold extraction from ore. The results are published in Chemical Engineering.


Study shows new chloride-based process recovers 84% of gold compared to the 64% recovered with traditional methods.

Nov 8, 2021

Locking Guests Inside Disneyland Shows China’s Extreme Covid Tactics

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, surveillance

Quarantining people in Disneyland.


While thousands of visitors to Shanghai Disneyland on Sunday were queuing for roller coasters and watching fireworks above the fairytale castle, staff quietly sealed the amusement park. People in Hazmat suits streamed in through the gates, preparing to test everyone for Covid-19 before they could leave for the day.

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Nov 8, 2021

How an Arthritis-Suffering Grandma Became Call of Duty’s Deadliest Aimbot

Posted by in categories: entertainment, media & arts

A grandma becomes an e-gamer. And she seems to be very good.

I like the way technology is giving the elderly the chance to do more exciting types of sports and recreation.

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Nov 8, 2021

SpaceX Falcon Heavy Launch FINALLY SCHEDULED!

Posted by in categories: business, military, space

The SpaceX Falcon Heavy Launch which was scheduled for October 9 pushed to early next year. It’s finally happening, after 3 years of no activity, SpaceX schedules more than 4 launches to happen next year involving the SpaceX falcon heavy.
SpaceX’s next Falcon Heavy launching and dual-booster touchdown looks to be just around the corner for the first time in more than two years. After additional delays caused by its U.S. military cargo, SpaceX’s Falcon Heavy rocket’s next mission, which was previously intended for October, has been moved forward to early 2022. The Space Force’s USSF-44 mission was supposed to launch on Oct. 9 but it has been postponed.

In today’s video we look at how it all started, the developments made to date and we’re also going to take a peek into the future and see how glorious it is.

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Nov 8, 2021

Anders Sandberg | Game Theory of Cooperating w. Extraterrestrial Intelligence & Future Civilizations

Posted by in categories: alien life, ethics, internet, neuroscience, policy, robotics/AI

I think intelligent tool making life is rare but there is plenty of room for those far, far in advance of us. Robert Bradbury, who thought up M-Brains, said he did not think truly hyper advanced entities would bother communicating with us. Being able to process the entire history of human thought in a few millionths of a second puts them further away from us than we are from nematodes. But then that might not be giving them credit for their intelligence and resources, as they might wish to see how well their simulations have done compared to reality.


Foresight Intelligent Cooperation Group.

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Nov 7, 2021

This New 5D Storage Technology Offers 1000 Times More Density Than Blu-Ray

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, computing, nanotechnology

Scientists at the University of Southampton have achieved a data storage breakthrough, offering intense density and long-term archiving capabilities. With this new data storage, you can easily store up to 500 terabytes on a single CD-sized disc. Whether the data is information from museums and libraries to a person’s DNA records, it can store it all and much more!

This technology is known as five-dimensional (5D) optical storage and was first demonstrated back in 2013 when scientists were successful in using it to record and retrieve a 300-kb text file. It might not seem like much, but at that time, it was a breakthrough in data storing technologies just like how floppy discs played the same part some thousand years ago.

The data is written using a femtosecond laser which emits short but powerful pulses of light, forging tiny structures in glass that are measured in nanoscale. These structures contain information on the intensity and polarization of the laser beam in addition to the 3D space, hence it is referred as 5D data storage.