The FTC is sending $5.6 million in refunds to Ring users whose private video feeds were accessed without consent by Amazon employees and contractors, or had their accounts and devices hacked because of insufficient security protections.
The company has discovered a limited number of individuals whose personal information may have been impacted during the breach and is working with a third-party forensics firm to assess the extent of the attack’s impact on its operations and systems.
In with the in(mate) crowd Maria W Horn is a Swedish composer whose work explores the inherent spectral properties of sound. Using everything from analogue synthesisers to choirs, string instruments, pipe organ and various chamber music formats, she loves to mix synthetic sound with acoustic instruments. Horn combines spectralist techniques and site-specific source material in […]
Last updated 15 November, 2023 James Hype is a real product of our age, a DJ whose star rose on the tide of YouTube and social media sharing through lockdown, only to go stratospheric as soon as lockdown ended and gigs were back on. He’s now one of the busiest DJs on the circuit, and […]
Researchers at SentinelOne have noticed a potential cyberespionage group, whose origins are unclear (as of now), and employed modular backdoors and covert techniques to target telecommunication firms in the Middle East, Western Europe, and South Asia. This group, labeled Sandman APT, utilizes a new backdoor named LuaJIT, which is a just-in-time compiler for the Lua […]