Month: July 2022

Boris Johnson was “aware of media reports… of inappropriate behaviour” by disgraced MP Chris Pincher and sought advice before appointing him to be his deputy chief whip, Downing Street has confirmed. Speaking to reporters on Monday, the prime minister’s official spokesman said Mr Johnson was “not aware of any specific allegations being looked at” and
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Vulnerability coordination and bug bounty platform HackerOne on Friday disclosed that a former employee at the firm improperly accessed security reports submitted to it for personal gain. “The person anonymously disclosed this vulnerability information outside the HackerOne platform with the goal of claiming additional bounties,” it said. “In under 24 hours, we worked quickly to
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Levi Hummon, Filmore, YA’BOYZ “Good Riddance” If you’re looking for a feel-good summer anthem, look no further than “Good Riddance,” the latest collaboration from Levi Hummon, Filmore and YA’BOYZ. This euphoric song, penned by Hummon, Eric Arjes and Parker Welling, is narrated from the lens of a guy who’s moved on from his lonesome, post-breakup, sorrow-drowning
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While manufacturers have successfully increased the water-repelling nature of smartphones, they are still far from “waterproof”. A water-resistant product can usually resist water penetration to some extent, but a waterproof product is (meant to be) totally impervious to water. Last week, Samsung Australia was fined A$14 million (roughly Rs. 76 crores) by the Australian Federal
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California is formally asking the federal government to add the heavily polluted former site of Exide Technologies, abandoned through bankruptcy by its owners two years ago, to the National Priorities List to make it eligible for millions of dollars in additional clean-up funds. The California Department of Toxic Substances Control estimates lead, arsenic and cadmium
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Amazon, in December 2021, patched a high severity vulnerability affecting its Photos app for Android that could have been exploited to steal a user’s access tokens. “The Amazon access token is used to authenticate the user across multiple Amazon APIs, some of which contain personal data such as full name, email, and address,” Checkmarx researchers
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While the last six years have provided much fuel for protest music, few have done it with as much clarity and musicality as Raye Zaragoza. Zaragoza, who is of Japanese, Mexican, and indigenous descent, draws from her identity to write powerful, strident protest songs that are equally at home in coffee shops and the Grey’s
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