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Nella primavera del 2025 ricorreva l’ottavo centenario della composizione di un testo noto, dalle sue prime parole, come l’Audite poverelle: l’ultima volontà del Poverello di Assisi, lasciata a Chiara, alle donne di San Damiano e alle loro seguaci sp…


l'UE sempre più "mazzolata", ma bomber Pfizer & c pensano a giocare alla guerra.

Cina: dazi sui prodotti caseari UE

A partire da domani la Cina imporrà dazi dal 21,9% al 42,7% sui prodotti lattiero caseari dell’Unione Europea. Lo ha annunciato il ministro del Commercio cinese, che ha spiegato che la misura sarà temporanea e avrà lo scopo di compensare le perdite del settore in Cina. «I prodotti lattiero-caseari importati provenienti dall’UE ricevono sussidi», ha detto il ministro. «L’industria lattiero-casearia nazionale cinese ha subito danni sostanziali ed esiste un nesso causale tra i sussidi e il danno», ha aggiunto.



Device Code Phishing: la minaccia che non ruba password, ma compromette gli account utente


@Informatica (Italy e non Italy 😁)
Il phishing del codice dispositivo provoca la compromissione dell’account, l’esfiltrazione di dati e molto altro ancora. Ecco come proteggersi dal Device Code Phishing, la forma di phishing che non ruba la password, ma si





Lo sgombero di Askatasuna e il ruolo dello Stato


@Giornalismo e disordine informativo
articolo21.org/2025/12/lo-sgom…
Il punto non è quanto ci piaccia o meno Askatasuna, quanto ci entusiasmino presupposto ideologico, finalità, obiettivi e metodi. Il punto è cosa deve tentare di fare la politica di fronte ad un fatto sociale così rilevante,



Da un anno non mi rinnovano la tessera stampa turca. Perché?


@Giornalismo e disordine informativo
articolo21.org/2025/12/da-un-a…
“È da circa un anno che non ho ottenuto il rinnovo della mia tessera stampa turca, necessaria per la mia attività giornalistica, pubblica, in Turchia in qualità di corrispondente di Radio




Marisa Kabas of The Handbasket joins the pod to talk about indie journalism, the industry, and what's going on in the federal government

Marisa Kabas of The Handbasket joins the pod to talk about indie journalism, the industry, and whatx27;s going on in the federal government#podcasts


Podcast: Marisa Kabas on Landing Big Scoops as an Independent Journalist


Marisa Kabas is the founder of The Handbasket, an independent newsletter and website that has been breaking stories left and right about government workers, the media business, and Trump’s mass deportation campaign. Please go subscribe to The Handbasket here!

In this episode of the podcast, Jason and Marisa share notes Marisa about doing journalism without a big newsroom, how the media business has changed over the last decade, and why sources often prefer to talk to journalists who don’t work for mainstream media.
playlist.megaphone.fm?e=TBIEA5…
Stories discussed:

Truth, morality and independence in journalism under the second Trump regime
My full remarks to students and faculty at Grinnell College.
The HandbasketMarisa Kabas


Breaking: The Handbasket is first to report catastrophic OMB funding memo
Posted on Bluesky earlier this evening, other major outlets have since confirmed.
The HandbasketMarisa Kabas


Move fast and break people
For Elon Musk’s government, the psychological warfare is the point.
The HandbasketMarisa Kabas


Listen to the weekly podcast on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or YouTube. Become a paid subscriber for access to this episode's bonus content and to power our journalism. If you become a paid subscriber, check your inbox for an email from our podcast host Transistor for a link to the subscribers-only version! You can also add that subscribers feed to your podcast app of choice and never miss an episode that way. The email should also contain the subscribers-only unlisted YouTube link for the extended video version too. It will also be in the show notes in your podcast player.

Or watch it here:
youtube.com/embed/e73spvZnc9s?…




Flock left at least 60 of its people-tracking Condor PTZ cameras live streaming and exposed to the open internet.#Flock


Flock Exposed Its AI-Powered Cameras to the Internet. We Tracked Ourselves


I am standing on the corner of Harris Road and Young Street outside of the Crossroads Business Park in Bakersfield, California, looking up at a Flock surveillance camera bolted high above a traffic signal. On my phone, I am watching myself in real time as the camera records and livestreams me—without any password or login—to the open internet. I wander into the intersection, stare at the camera and wave. On the livestream, I can see myself clearly. Hundreds of miles away, my colleagues are remotely watching me too through the exposed feed.

Flock left livestreams and administrator control panels for at least 60 of its AI-enabled Condor cameras around the country exposed to the open internet, where anyone could watch them, download 30 days worth of video archive, and change settings, see log files, and run diagnostics.

Unlike many of Flock’s cameras, which are designed to capture license plates as people drive by, Flock’s Condor cameras are pan-tilt-zoom (PTZ) cameras designed to record and track people, not vehicles. Condor cameras can be set to automatically zoom in on people’s faces as they walk through a parking lot, down a public street, or play on a playground, or they can be controlled manually, according to marketing material on Flock’s website. We watched Condor cameras zoom in on a woman walking her dog on a bike path in suburban Atlanta; a camera followed a man walking through a Macy’s parking lot in Bakersfield; surveil children swinging on a swingset at a playground; and film high-res video of people sitting at a stoplight in traffic. In one case, we were able to watch a man rollerblade down Brookhaven, Georgia’s Peachtree Creek Greenway bike path. The Flock camera zoomed in on him and tracked him as he rolled past. Minutes later, he showed up on another exposed camera livestream further down the bike path. The camera’s resolution was good enough that we were able to see that, when he stopped beneath one of the cameras, he was watching rollerblading videos on his phone.


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The exposure was initially discovered by YouTuber and technologist Benn Jordan and was shared with security researcher Jon “GainSec” Gaines, who recently found numerous vulnerabilities in several other models of Flock’s automated license plate reader (ALPR) cameras. They shared the details of what they found with me, and I verified many of the details seen in the exposed portals by driving to Bakersfield to walk in front of two cameras there while I watched myself on the livestream. I also pulled Flock’s contracts with cities for Condor cameras, pulled details from company presentations about the technology, and geolocated a handful of the cameras to cities and towns across the United States. Jordan also filmed himself in front of several of the cameras on the Peachtree Creek Greenway bike path. Jordan said he and Gaines discovered many of the exposed cameras with Shodan, an internet of things search engine that researchers regularly use to identify improperly secured devices.
youtube.com/embed/vU1-uiUlHTo?…
After finding links to the feed, “immediately, we were just without any username, without any password, we were just seeing everything from playgrounds to parking lots with people, Christmas shopping and unloading their stuff into cars,” Jordan told me in an interview. “I think it was like the first time that I actually got like immediately scared … I think the one that affected me most was as playground. You could see unattended kids, and that’s something I want people to know about so they can understand how dangerous this is.” In a YouTube video about his research, Jordan said he was able to use footage pulled from the exposed feed to identify specific people using open source investigation tools in order to show how trivially an exposure like this could be abused.
Benn Jordan
Last year, Flock introduced AI features to Condor cameras that automatically zoom in on people as they walk by. In Flock’s announcement of this feature, it explained that this technology “zooms in on a suspect exiting one car, stealing an item from another, and returning to his vehicle. Every detail is captured, providing invaluable evidence for investigators.” On several of the exposed feeds, we saw Flock cameras repeatedly zooming in on and tracking random people as they walked by. The cameras can be controlled by AI or manually.

The exposure highlights the fact that Flock is not just surveilling cars—it is surveilling people, and in some cases it is doing so in an insecure way, and highlight the types of places that its Condor cameras are being deployed. Condor cameras are part of Flock’s ever-expanding quest to “prevent crime,” and are sometimes integrated with its license plate cameras, its gunshot detection microphones, and its automated camera drones.

Cooper Quintin, senior staff technologist at the Electronic Frontier Foundation, told me the behavior he saw in videos we shared with him “shows that Flock's ambitions go far beyond license-plate surveillance. They want to be a nation-wide panopticon, watching everyone all the time. Flock's goal isn't to catch stolen cars, their goal is to have total surveillance of everyone all the time."


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The cameras were left not just livestreaming to the internet for anyone who could find the link, but in many cases their administrative portals were left open with no login credentials required whatsoever. On this portal, some camera settings could be changed, diagnostics could be run, and text logs of what the camera was doing were being streamed, too. Thirty days of the camera’s archive was left available for anyone to watch or download from any of the cameras that we found. We were not able to geolocate every camera that was left unprotected, but we found cameras at a New York City Department of Transportation parking lot, on a street corner in suburban New Orleans, in random cul-de-sacs, in a Lowes parking lot, in the parking lot of a skatepark, at a pool, outside a parking garage, at an apartment complex, outside a church, on a bike path, and at various street intersections around the country.

Quintin told me the situation reminds him of ALPR cameras from another company that were left unprotected a decade ago.

“This is not the first time we have seen ALPRs exposed on the public internet, and it won't be the last. Law enforcement agencies around the country have been all too eager to adopt mass surveillance technologies, but sometimes they have put little effort into ensuring the systems are secure and the sensitive data they collect on everyday people is protected,” Quintin said. “Law enforcement should not collect information they can’t protect. Surveillance technology without adequate security measures puts everyone’s safety at risk.”

It was not always clear which business or agency owned specific cameras that were left exposed, or what type of misconfiguration led to the exposure, though I was able to find a $348,000 Flock contract for Brookhaven, Georgia, which manages the Peachtree Creek Greenway, and includes 64 Condor cameras.

"This was a limited misconfiguration on a very small number of devices, and it has since been remedied," a Flock spokesperson told 404 Media. It did not answer questions about what caused the misconfiguration or how many devices ultimately were affected.

💡
Do you know anything else about surveillance? I would love to hear from you. Using a non-work device, you can message me securely on Signal at jason.404. Otherwise, send me an email at jason@404media.co.

In response to Jordan and Gaines’ earlier research on vulnerabilities in other Flock cameras, Flock CEO Garrett Langley said in a LinkedIn post that “The Flock system has not been hacked. We secure customer data to the highest standard of industry requirements, including strict industry standard encryption. Flock’s cloud storage has never been compromised.” The exposure of these video feeds is not a hack of Flock’s system, but demonstrates a major misconfiguration of at least some cameras. It also highlights a major misconfiguration in its security that persisted for at least days.

“When I was making my last video [about Flock ALPR vulnerabilities], it was almost like a catchphrase where I'd say like, ‘I don't see how it could get any worse.’ And then something would happen where you'd be like, wow, they pulled it off. They made it worse,” Jordan said. “And then this is like the ultimate one. Because this is completely unrelated [to my earlier research] and I don’t really know how it could be any worse to be honest.”

In a 2023 video webinar introducing the Condor platform to police, Flock executives said the cameras are meant to be paired with their ALPR cameras and are designed to feed video to FlockOS, a police panel that allows cops to hop from camera to camera in real time across a mapped-out view of their city. In Bakersfield, which has 382 Flock cameras according to a transparency report, one of the Condor cameras we saw was located next to a mall that had at least two Flock ALPR cameras stationed at the entrances to the mall parking lot.

Kevin Cox, a Flock consultant who used to work for the Grand Prairie, Texas Police Department, said in the webinar that he built an “intel center” with a high “density” of Flock cameras in that city. “I am passionate about this because I’ve lived it. The background behind video [Condor] with LPR is rich with arrests,” he said. “That rich experience of seeing what happened kind of brings it alive to [judges]. So video combined with the LPR evidence of placing a vehicle at the scene or nearby is an incredibly game changing experience into the prosecutorial chain of events.”

“You can look down a tremendous distance with our cameras, to the next intersection and the next intersection,” he said. “The camera will identify people, what they’re wearing, and cars up to a half a mile away. It’s that good.”


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Condor cameras in a Flock demo showing off its AI tracking features

In the webinar Cox pulled up a multiview panel of a series of cameras and took control of them, dragging, panning, and zooming on cameras and hopping between multiple cameras in real time. Cox suggested that police officers could either use Flock’s cameras to pinpoint a person at a place and time and then use it to request “cell tower dumps” from wireless companies, or could use cell GPS data to then go into the Flock system to track a person as they moved throughout a city. “If you can place that person’s cell phone and then the Condor video and Falcon LPR evidence, it would be next to impossible to beat that in court,” he said, adding that some towns may just want to have always-on, always recording video of certain intersections or town squares. “There’s endless endless uses to what we can do with these things.”

On the webinar, Seth Cimino, who was a police officer at the Citrus Heights, California police department at the time but now works directly for Flock, told participants that officers in his city enjoyed using the cameras to zoom in on crimes.

“There is an eagerness amongst our staff that are logged in that have their own Flock accounts to be able to monitor our ALPR and pan tilt zoom Condor cameras throughout the community, to a point where sometimes our officers are beating dispatch with the information,” he said. “If there’s an incident that occurs at a specific intersection or a short distance away where our Condor cameras can zoom in on that area, it allows for real time overwatch […] as I sit here right now with you—how cool is this? We just had a Flock alert here in the city. I mean, it just popped up on my screen!”

Samantha Cole contributed reporting.




The Music of the Sea


For how crucial whales have been for humanity, from their harvest for meat and oil to their future use of saving the world from a space probe, humans knew very little about them until surprisingly recently. Most people, even in Herman Melville’s time, considered whales to be fish, and it wasn’t until humans went looking for submarines in the mid-1900s that we started to understand the complexities of their songs. And you don’t have to be a submarine pilot to listen now, either; all you need is something like these homemade hydraphones.

This project was done as part of a workshop in Indonesia, and it only takes a few hours to build. It’s based on a piezo microphone enclosed in a small case. A standard 3.5 mm audio cable runs into the enclosure and powers a preamp using a transistor and two resistors. With the piezo microphone and amplifier installed in this case, the case itself is waterproofed with a spray and allowed to dry. When doing this build in places where Plasti-Dip is available, it was found to be a more reliable and faster waterproofing method. Either way, with the waterproofing layer finished, it’s ready to toss into a body of water to listen for various sounds.

Some further instructions beyond construction demonstrate how to use these to capture stereo sounds, using two microphones connected to a stereo jack. The creators also took a setup connected to a Raspberry Pi offshore to a floating dock and installed a set permanently, streaming live audio wirelessly back to the mainland for easy listening, review, and analysis. There are other ways of interacting with the ocean using sound as well, like this project, which looks to open-source a sonar system.

Thanks to [deathbots] for the tip!


hackaday.com/2025/12/22/the-mu…



Internet-Connected Consoles Are Retro Now, And That Means Problems


A long time ago, there was a big difference between PC and console gaming. The former often came with headaches. You’d fight with drivers, struggle with crashes, and grow ever more frustrated dealing with CD piracy checks and endless patches and updates. Meanwhile, consoles offered the exact opposite experience—just slam in a cartridge, and go!

That beautiful feature fell away when consoles joined the Internet. Suddenly there were servers to sign in to and updates to download and a whole bunch of hoops to jump through before you even got to play a game. Now, those early generations of Internet-connected consoles are becoming retro, and that’s introduced a whole new set of problems now the infrastructure is dying or dead. Boot up and play? You must be joking!

Turn 360 Degrees And Log Out

The Xbox 360 was a console that had online gaming built in to its very fabric from the outset. Credit: author
Microsoft first launched the Xbox 360 in 2005. It was the American company’s second major console, following on from the success of the Xbox that fought so valiantly against the Sony PlayStation 2 and the Nintendo GameCube. Where those sixth generation consoles had been the first to really lean in to online gaming, it was the seventh generation that would make it a core part of the console experience.

The Xbox 360 liked to sign you straight into Xbox Live the moment you switched on the console. All your friends would get hear a little bling as they were notified that you’d come online, and you’d get the same in turn. You could then boot into the game of your choice, where you’d likely sign into a specific third-party server to check for updates and handle any online matchmaking.

The Xbox 360 didn’t need to be always online, it just really wanted you to be. This was simply how gaming was to be now. Networked and now highly visible, in a semi-public way. Where Microsoft blazed a trail in the online user experience for the console market, Sony soon followed with its own feature-equivalent offering, albeit one that was never quite as elegant as that which it aimed to duplicate.
Boot up an Xbox 360 today, and you might find it rather difficult to log into your Xbox Live account—even if you do remember your password! Credit: author
Fire up an Xbox 360 today, and you’ll see that console acting like it’s still 2008 or something. It will pleasantly reach out to Microsoft servers, and it will even get a reply—and it will then prompt you to log in with your Xbox Live or Microsoft account. You’ve probably got one—many of us do—but here lies a weird problem. When you try to log in to an Xbox 360 with your current Microsoft account, you will almost certainly fail! You might get an error like 8015D086 or 8015D000, or have it fail more quietly with a simple timeout.

It all comes down to authentication. See, the Internet was a much happier, friendly place when the Xbox 360 first hit the shelves. Back then, a simple password of 8 characters or more with maybe a numeral or two was considered pretty darn good for login purposes. Not like today, where you need to up the complexity significantly and throw in two-factor authentication to boot. And therein lies the problem, because the Xbox 360 was never expecting two-factor authentication to be a thing.

Today, your Microsoft account won’t be authorized for login without it, and thus your Xbox 360 won’t be able to log in to Xbox Live. In fairness, you wouldn’t miss much. All the online stores and marketplaces and games servers were killed ages ago, after all. However, the 360 really doesn’t like not being online. It will ask you all the time if you want to sign in! Plus, if you wanted to get your machine the very last dashboard updates or anything like that… you need to be able to sign into Xbox Live.

Thankfully, there is a workaround. Community members have found various solutions, most easily found in posts shared on Reddit. Sometimes you can get by simply by disabling two-factor authentication and changing to a low-complexity password due to the 360’s character limit in the entry field. If that doesn’t work, though, you have to go to the effort to set up a special “App Password” in your Microsoft account that will let the Xbox 360 authenticate in a simpler, more direct fashion.
Plenty of modern video games are built with online features that rely on the publisher-hosted servers. When those shut down, parts of the game die. Credit: author
Pull all this off, and you’ll hear that famous chime as your home console reaches the promised land of Xbox Live. None of your friends will be online, and nobody’s really checking your Gamerscore anymore, but now you can finally play some games!

Only, for a great many titles on the Xbox 360, there were dedicated online servers, too. Pop in FIFA 16, and the game will stall for a moment before it reports that it’s failed to connect to EA’s servers. Back in the day, those servers provided a continual stream of minor updates to the game, player rosters, and stats, making it feel like almost a living thing. Today, there’s nothing out there but a request that always times out.

This would be no issue if it happened just once, but alas… you’ll have to tangle with the game doing this time and again, every time you boot it up. It wants that server, it’s so sure it’s out there… but it never phones back from the aether.

Many games still retain most of their playability without an Internet connection, and most consoles will still boot up without one. Nevertheless, the more these machines are built to rely on an ever-present link to the cloud, the less of them will be accessible many years into the future.

Not Unique

It’s much harder to join the fun than it used to be. Credit: author
This problem is not unique to the Xbox 360. It’s common to run into similar problems with the PlayStation 3, with Sony providing a workaround to get the old consoles online. For both consoles, you’re still relying on the servers remaining online. It’s fair to assume the little remaining support for these machines will be switched off too, in time. Meanwhile, if you’re playing Pokemon Diamond on the Nintendo DS, you’ve probably noticed the servers are completely gone. In that case, you’re left to rely on community efforts to emulate the original Nintendo WFC servers, which run with varying levels of success. For less popular games, though there’s simply nothing left—whatever online service there was is gone, and it’s not coming back.

These problems will come for each following console generation in turn. Any game and any console that relies on manufacturer-run infrastructure will eventually shut down when it becomes no longer profitable or worthwhile to run. It’s a great pity, to be sure. The best we can do is to pressure manufacturers to make sure that their hardware and games retain as much capability as possible when a connection isn’t available. That will at least leave us with something to play when the servers do finally go dark.


hackaday.com/2025/12/22/intern…



Apple: multa di 115 milioni di dollari dal Garante della Concorrenza e del Mercato italiano


L’Autorità Garante della Concorrenza e del Mercato italiana (AGCM) ha imposto una sanzione significativa ad Apple. La sanzione ammonta a 98,6 milioni di euro, ovvero circa 115 milioni di dollari. ed è relativa a al presunto abuso di posizione dominante nel mercato delle app mobili.

Secondo l’autorità di regolamentazione italiana, l’azienda ha limitato gli sviluppatori di app di terze parti, violando le norme europee sulla concorrenza. Il caso riguarda l’informativa sulla privacy dell’App Tracking Transparency (ATT) introdotta nel 2021, in base alla quale Apple richiede agli sviluppatori un consenso separato agli utenti per raccogliere dati e utilizzarli a fini pubblicitari.

La notifica corrispondente non viene generata dagli sviluppatori stessi, ma da Apple stessa, e solo secondo uno scenario stabilito dall’azienda.

L’agenzia ritiene che questo approccio crei condizioni di disparità per gli operatori di mercato e violi i principi di proporzionalità. Afferma che la politica di raccolta dati è imposta unilateralmente, ostacola il pieno funzionamento dei partner commerciali ed è incompatibile con le normative sulla protezione dei dati personali.

Particolare attenzione è stata prestata al fatto che gli sviluppatori terzi erano costretti a duplicare le richieste di consenso, costringendo di fatto gli utenti a ripetere la stessa procedura più volte.

Ciò, secondo l’autorità di regolamentazione, ha comportato ulteriori complicazioni e ha messo le aziende che utilizzano l’App Store in una posizione vulnerabile.

L’indagine è iniziata nella primavera del 2023.

Le autorità italiane hanno sottolineato che l’indagine è stata condotta in stretta consultazione con la Commissione Europea e le autorità antitrust di altri Paesi. Apple non ha ancora rilasciato dichiarazioni ufficiali in merito alla decisione.

L'articolo Apple: multa di 115 milioni di dollari dal Garante della Concorrenza e del Mercato italiano proviene da Red Hot Cyber.



Preparatevi alla distruzione dei dati! Se non paghi, la pubblicazione non basta. Entrano in scena i wiper


Secondo BI.ZONE, entro il 2026, gli aggressori opteranno sempre più per la distruzione totale dell’infrastruttura aziendale anziché per la crittografia.

Questo si riferisce a scenari in cui, dopo essere penetrati in una rete, gli aggressori utilizzano wiper, strumenti distruttivi che cancellano i dati e possono disabilitare le apparecchiature di rete. Questo approccio aumenta i danni e complica il ripristino: le aziende devono affrontare non solo tempi di inattività, ma anche la perdita di componenti critici.

Nel 2025, le aziende del settore retail sono state le più frequenti richiedenti di indagini su incidenti informatici gravi, rappresentando il 31% di tutte le richieste. BI.ZONE rileva inoltre che il settore retail è diventato il principale responsabile delle violazioni dei dati, rappresentando quasi il 40% dei casi.

Le cause principali includono problemi comuni: infrastrutture IT obsolete e scarsa segmentazione della rete, che consentono agli attacchi di diffondersi più rapidamente lungo il perimetro e di colpire più sistemi.

Il settore IT si è classificato al secondo posto in termini di numero di indagini, con una quota del 26%. Anche le piccole aziende IT sono attraenti per gli aggressori, poiché spesso lavorano come appaltatori per grandi clienti. Di conseguenza, la compromissione di un’azienda appaltatrice viene utilizzata come gateway per infrastrutture più sicure. BI.ZONE stima che nel 2025 il 30% degli incidenti altamente critici fosse collegato ad attacchi tramite terze parti. Un anno prima, questa percentuale era la metà, al 15%.

Il terzo posto in termini di numero di indagini è condiviso da aziende di trasporto, telecomunicazioni e organizzazioni governative, ciascuna responsabile dell’11% dei casi. BI.ZONE descrive la tendenza generale come una crescente sofisticatezza e distruttività degli attacchi, mentre le motivazioni di base rimangono le stesse: il guadagno finanziario rimane dominante e il phishing rimane il metodo più comune di penetrazione iniziale. Tuttavia, l’enfasi si sposta di anno in anno: nel 2022, defacement e campagne di hacktivisti sono stati prominenti, nel 2023, fughe di notizie e dump di dati di massa, nel 2024, la crittografia attiva delle infrastrutture e nel 2025 l’uso di wiper è stato registrato con frequenza significativamente maggiore.

BI.ZONE rileva anche un aumento del tempo necessario agli aggressori per rimanere inosservati nell’infrastruttura. Nel 2024, la media era di 25 giorni, per poi salire a 42 giorni nel 2025. Tuttavia, la differenza rimane significativa: il tempo minimo di sviluppo dell’attacco dalla penetrazione alla crittografia nel 2025 era di 12,5 minuti, mentre il massimo era di 181 giorni.

Il ripristino da tali incidenti richiede ancora molto tempo.

Nel 2025, le aziende colpite hanno impiegato in media tre giorni per ripristinare i sistemi critici necessari alla ripresa delle operazioni aziendali. Il ripristino completo dei processi aziendali ha richiesto in media 14 giorni.

L'articolo Preparatevi alla distruzione dei dati! Se non paghi, la pubblicazione non basta. Entrano in scena i wiper proviene da Red Hot Cyber.



Oggi, nella cattedrale “Assunzione della Beata Vergine Maria” a Sofia, sede dei cattolici di rito bizantino, è stato validato il francobollo giubilare in occasione del 100° anniversario dell’arrivo di mons.





“In questi ultimi decenni, la crisi della fiducia nella Chiesa suscitata dagli abusi commessi da membri del clero, che ci riempiono di vergogna e ci richiamano all’umiltà, ci ha reso ancora più consapevoli dell’urgenza di una formazione integrale che…


“Mentalità efficientista” e “quietismo”. Sono queste, per il Papa, le due tentazioni opposte da cui i preti devono guardarsi “nel nostro mondo contemporaneo, caratterizzato da ritmi incalzanti e dall’ansia di essere iperconnessi, che ci rende spesso …


“Il rapporto con il vescovo, la fraternità con gli altri presbiteri, il rapporto con i fedeli laici”. Sono le tre coordinate dell’identità sacerdotale, raccomandate dal Papa nella lettera apostolica “Una fedeltà che genera futuro”.


‼️La vicenda di David McBride rappresenta un caso emblematico nella discussione sul whistleblowing, ossia il coraggio di denunciare crimini o comportamenti illeciti all’interno di strutture di potere, e la ragion di Stato che tende a proteggere tale …

reshared this



Anlasslose Speicherung: Justizministerium veröffentlicht Gesetzentwurf zur Vorratsdatenspeicherung


netzpolitik.org/2025/anlasslos…



all'inferno c'è un nuovo diavolo


eccoci... considerato che siamo già al limite per l'elevato numero di oggetti in orbita, e potrebbe bastare anche solo una tempesta solare a provocare il disastro, ecco a voi, signori e signori, la tecnologia che cancellerà l'accesso allo spazio (con tutte le ricadute e i benefici tecnologici evidenti) per l'umanità per 2-3 secoli... grazie alla famosa sindrome di Kessler....


L'ultimo TechDispatch esplora le sfide della privacy dei portafogli di identità digitale

Il #GarantePrivacy europeo (GEPD) ha pubblicato il suo ultimo TechDispatch , una serie di articoli che forniscono analisi dettagliate su nuove tecnologie e tendenze. Questo numero si concentra sui Digital Identity Wallet (DIW) e su come possiamo garantire che rimangano conformi ai principi di protezione dei dati.

(segui l'account @Privacy Pride per avere gli ultimi aggiornamenti sulla #privacy e la gestione dei dati personali)

Un DIW consente agli utenti di archiviare in modo sicuro dati di identità e credenziali in un repository digitale, consentendo l'accesso ai servizi sia nel mondo fisico che in quello digitale. Intitolata "Il percorso verso un approccio di protezione dei dati by design e by default", la nuova pubblicazione è una lettura essenziale per decisori politici e professionisti che desiderano garantire che lo sviluppo di DIW, come il futuro Portafoglio Europeo di Identità Digitale (EUDIW) , aderisca ai principi di Privacy by Design e by Default.

Per saperne di più sulle raccomandazioni del GEPD per un quadro normativo sull'identità digitale sicuro e rispettoso della privacy,

edps.europa.eu/data-protection…

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Bulgaria, una crisi senza uscita (parte prima). Cinque anni di instabilità e il collasso della politica


@Notizie dall'Italia e dal mondo
Le dimissioni dell’11 dicembre non sono un incidente ma l’esito di una crisi che dura dal 2020. Proteste, corruzione, inflazione, ingresso nell’euro e scontro istituzionale si innestano su un sistema incapace



#NoiSiamoLeScuole questa settimana è dedicato a due nuove scuole, la “Falcone-Borsellino” di Monterenzio (BO) e la “Mustica” di Santa Sofia d’Epiro (CS) che, con i fondi del #PNRR finalizzati alla costruzione di nuove scuole, sono state demolite e ri…







Difesa, spazio e procurement. Quando il tempo diventa una capacità operativa

@Notizie dall'Italia e dal mondo

Negli anni il settore spaziale è passato da ambito specialistico, quasi esclusivamente istituzionale, a terreno centrale della competizione economica e tecnologica nonché dominio di contrasto militare. Questa trasformazione, spesso sintetizzata nel mondo civile




Maurizio Pratelli – Scendo prima del capolinea
freezonemagazine.com/articoli/…
Nel suo secondo romanzo, Maurizio Pratelli mette a punto, in modo piuttosto convincente, la propria capacità di narratore e lo stile di scrittura portando in scena un protagonista in bilico tra il peso del passato e la ricerca di un futuro ancora possibile. Andrea, soffocato da un lavoro che non sente suo e da una […]
L'articolo Maurizio Pratelli – Scendo prima


LIBRI. Cronache da un paese interrotto. Diario di un prof in Palestina


@Notizie dall'Italia e dal mondo
Il paese interrotto descritto nei racconti dell'autore Roberto Cirelli è la Palestina: economia, cultura e vita sociale sono messe in pericolo quotidianamente dall’occupazione israeliana
L'articolo LIBRI. Cronache da un paese interrotto. Diario di un prof in Palestina



La Ragion di Stato contro il Whistleblowing: il caso di David McBride


La vicenda di David McBride rappresenta un caso emblematico nella discussione sul whistleblowing, ossia il coraggio di denunciare crimini o comportamenti illeciti all’interno di strutture di potere, e la ragion di Stato che tende a proteggere tale potere a scapito della giustizia e dei diritti umani. McBride, ex capitano dell’Esercito britannico e avvocato militare dell’Esercito australiano, […]


freeassangeitalia.it/la-ragion…



Riceviamo e pubblichiamo:
Mentre il mondo celebra le festività natalizie e la fine dell’anno, i cittadini di Gaza vivono queste giornate nel modo più doloroso: accompagnando i propri cari verso l’ultimo saluto nei cimiteri.
Nella giornata di ieri, sette civili hanno perso la vita nel quartiere di Al-Tuffah, nella parte orientale della città di Gaza, a seguito di bombardamenti israeliani che hanno colpito una scuola trasformata in centro di accoglienza per sfollati, già costretti a fuggire dalle loro abitazioni a causa dei continui attacchi.
Dal 11 ottobre scorso, data di entrata in vigore della tregua, oltre 400 cittadini di Gaza sono stati uccisi, in quella che appare come una violazione continua e sistematica della tregua firmata a Sharm El-Sheikh, in Egitto.
Questi eventi confermano il grave e persistente calpestamento dei diritti umani fondamentali della popolazione civile.
La popolazione di Gaza ha urgente bisogno di aiuto umanitario:
ha bisogno dell’apertura dei valichi, di tende, di medicine, di cibo, di acqua potabile e di protezione.
Non ha bisogno di bombe che continuano a spezzare vite e distruggere famiglie.
I cittadini gazawi chiedono semplicemente ciò che spetta a ogni essere umano:
la possibilità di vivere in sicurezza, di proteggere i propri figli e di accogliere il nuovo anno in pace, come ogni altro popolo del mondo.
Il silenzio e l’inazione della comunità internazionale di fronte a questa tragedia rappresentano una grave responsabilità morale e politica. È tempo di agire, di fermare la violenza e di garantire una reale protezione ai civili.
20/12/2025
Associazione dei Palestinesi in Italia (API)


Wikileaks su Twitter:

JULIAN ASSANGE ARRIVA DENUNCIA CRIMINALE CONTRO LA FONDAZIONE NOBEL PER IL PREMIO PER LA PACE “STRUMENTO DI GUERRA”

Il fondatore di WikiLeaks Allege il premio 2025 a María Corina Machado Costituisce un'appropriazione indebita,…



L'escalation continua quando il Presidente Trump ha annunciato il 10 dicembre, due giorni dopo la cerimonia del Nobel, che gli scioperi degli Stati Uniti sarebbero "iniziati via terra.


per la brexit mi dispiace solo per gli scozzesi. e l'irlanda del nord. la scozia ha fatto un referendum per uscire dal regno unito ed ha votato no solo perché fuoriuscendo dal regno unito si sarebbe trovata fuori dalla UE e il regno unito avrebbe posto sicuramente un veto per farla entrare come singola nazione. ma poi il regno unito è uscito e la loro scelta si è rivelata, a posteriori, sbagliata 🙁