Friday 18 October 2024

Many Americans consider their future Social Security benefits crucial to their retirement plans—while for a lot of people with next to nothing saved for retirement, their Social Security benefit is their retirement plan. Though the average monthly benefit is just $1,907—or close to $23,000 a year—that’s certainly better than having no income at all in your later years.

However critical Social Security is to your personal retirement plans, you can't take it for grated. Yes, there’s always the possibility that Social Security will “run out of money” at some point if our elected officials can’t find a solution to its funding issues. But while you can't do much about that, it's worth being aware of the ways you can jeopardize a portion of your benefits—or all of them—under some specific scenarios.

Here are four ways you can lose some or all of your Social Security benefits, even after you’re eligible to claim them.

You wind up in jail or prison

If you find yourself incarcerated for more than 30 days for any reason, Social Security assumes that the government is now paying your bills and will suspend your payments for the duration of your glamorous stay in that facility. The good news is that anyone who gets benefits through your work record (like a spouse) will continue to get their benefits, and you can resume getting yours a month after your release. Still, if you do a five-year stretch somewhere, you’ll have lost an average of about $115,000 that could have landed in your bank account. And if you find yourself in prison for the rest of your life, you might never see a dime of Social Security.

You exceed the income limits

Social Security payments are based on your retirement age. For most of us, that’s age 66 or 67, but you can elect to start receiving your benefits earlier (age 62) or later (age 70). If you wait until you’re full retirement age to retire, you can actually work as much as you want—your earnings won’t affect your benefit. But if you retire "early," you’ll have to be careful until you reach full retirement age.

Retiring early gets you lower benefits (by up to 30%, depending on your age)—and the Social Security Administration is aware that some sneaky folks will “retire” at 62 to get their Social Security and then continue working. So they have this thing called the earnings test, or income limit—if you earn too much money, your benefits are reduced accordingly. The income limit changes annually (currently, it’s $22,320, and next year it’ll be $23,400). For every $2 you earn over that limit during the year, they will deduct $1 from your benefits. It’s possible to earn so much that you wipe out your benefit entirely, although if you’re making that much money, you might not care. And you don’t technically “lose” this money, it’s just deferred—you’ll get higher benefit checks later, once you reach full retirement age. But if you’re counting on that money to pay your bills month to month, be very careful about how much extra income you earn.

You have to pay back taxes or restitution

Some folks are surprised to learn that Social Security payments—which we fund by paying FICA taxes out of our income before we retire—are actually taxed. A fun fact is that if you don’t pay federal taxes and wind up owing the IRS money, they can—and certainly will—levy 15% of your Social Security payment to claw back that money. Your Social Security payments can also be garnished to pay court-ordered stuff like child support, alimony, or restitution. If your life gets real messy after you retire, you can see a significant amount of your benefit diverted to other accounts.

You get remarried

This is a bit niche, but if you receive benefits based on your spouse’s work record, you can continue to receive those benefits even if you get divorced (as long as the marriage lasted at least 10 years). There’s one way to lose those benefits: Get remarried. If you marry someone new, you’ll lose your ex-spouse’s benefits.

Plot twist: If your new marriage ends in divorce as well (or an annulment, or death) you can have your benefits pinned to your prior ex-spouse reinstated.

You give them up on purpose

Finally, there’s a voluntary way to lose your benefits—you can withdraw your application. If you’ve applied for Social Security benefits before the age of 70, you can change your mind within 12 months and file form SSA-521 to request withdrawal of your application. You’ll have to pay back any money you received in that year, but your payments will be suspended.

Why would you do this? If you decide to go back to work and know you’ll exceed the income limit, you can avoid a lot of trouble by asking for a Social Security do-over. And since early retirement means lower benefits, resetting the clock means your potential benefit will continue to grow until you hit age 70, so you’ll get bigger payments later.

Cops aren't sure how to protect kids from an ever-escalating rise in fake child sex abuse imagery fueled by advances in generative AI.

Last year, child safety experts warned of thousands of "AI-generated child sex images" rapidly spreading on the dark web around the same time the FBI issued a warning that "benign photos" of children posted online could be easily manipulated to exploit and harm kids.

So far, US prosecutors have only brought two criminal cases in 2024 attempting to use existing child pornography and obscenity laws to combat the threat, Reuters reported on Thursday. Meanwhile, as young girls are increasingly targeted by classmates in middle and high schools, at least one teen has called for a targeted federal law designed to end the AI abuse.

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source https://arstechnica.com/tech-policy/2024/10/us-prosecutors-vow-to-step-up-fight-against-fake-ai-child-sex-images/

Thursday 17 October 2024

The United States Department of Justice unsealed an indictment today against two Sudanese brothers suspected of being the operators of Anonymous Sudan, a notorious and dangerous hacktivist group known for conducting over 35,000 DDoS attacks in a year. [...]

source https://www.bleepingcomputer.com/news/security/us-disrupts-anonymous-sudan-ddos-operation-indicts-2-sudanese-brothers/

Whether you're a practical person who fishes their pumpkins out of a big crate at the grocery store or the sentimental type who values a stroll through a pumpkin patch, the general principles of picking out a good pumpkin are the same. Depending on what you want to use your pumpkins for—carving or eating—you may want to look for slightly different things. Here's your guide to pumpkin picking.

What to look for in a pumpkin, generally

Even at the pumpkin patch, you're (probably) not going to be hacking your own gourd off the vine, so it's not worth discussing how to know when a pumpkin is ready to harvest. When you're buying a pumpkin, they'll have almost certainly been harvested already, sitting in some kind of bin or pile for you to dig through. That doesn't mean they were all harvested when they should have been or that they're all perfect. Here's what to look for, generally, to ensure you choose the best one:

  • No matter what color the pumpkin is, that color should be visible all the way around the fruit. Avoid patchy pumpkins or ones with multiple colors and shades visible. Go for a solidly filled-in one.

  • Look for dry, withered stems to make sure this puppy isn't too wet. Black or dark green colors on the stems are best. You want it rigid and almost dead-looking. If there are vines attached, make sure any leaves are also crispy. Try to select a pumpkin that has a longer stem, too; avoid any that have been cut too close to the rind. Even with a long stem, though, avoid picking the pumpkin up that way. Always cradle it and support it from the bottom.

  • The exterior of the pumpkins should also be hard. You shouldn't be able to squish it or dent it with your hands. Try tapping on the rind and listening for a hollow sound. You don't want a lot of mush anywhere, from the stem to the exterior to the inside. Soft spots on any part of the pumpkin mean that pumpkin is not for you.

Smell may also be a factor: go ahead and give it a sniff to see if you get a pumpkin-y"odor, but if you're out in a pumpkin patch surrounded by smells on all sides, that may not do you much good.

The best pumpkins for decorating and eating

There are a few different varieties of pumpkin available. You don't need to be a horticulturist and burst into the pumpkin patch with a list of pumpkin types on hand, although if it gets you into the holiday spirit, you certainly can. The best advice is, thankfully, simple: Larger pumpkins are best for carving and decorating while smaller ones are best for baking.

Obviously, bigger ones give you a larger canvas on which to express your spookiest artistic visions, but they're useful for carving for other reasons, too. They're stringy inside and less desirable for eating. Aim for 10 to 14 pounds if you plan on carving. For baking, you might see signs that say "sugar pumpkins" or "Dickenson pumpkins." Your patch may even label "pie pumpkins." Even without labels, you'll know them by their size. Look for small, squat pumpkins around four pounds or so in weight. It's better to get dense ones, so knock on these and listen to determine if they're less hollow than the big boys you picked up for carving.

Bear in mind these are all suggestions—all pumpkins are good pumpkins. I regularly bake with the guts from my carving pumpkins and get no complaints. If your grocery store has limited options, don't freak out. Just do the best you can.

Have you figured out the perfect costume idea to wear this Halloween? Besides getting to the store early to pick out your supplies, we have one important advance-notice life hack: Patch test anything you plan to slather all over your—or your kid’s—face.

Irritating or allergenic ingredients are common in cosmetics of all kinds, and everybody’s skin is different. A lipstick that doesn’t bother your friend might make your lips raw and puffy. (Arguably you should patch-test all your cosmetics, although many of us don’t bother.) Halloween makeup is a special concern because it’s usually something you haven’t used before, and in many cases you’re planning to spend a whole evening with the stuff all over your face.

There are different ways to do a patch test, depending on what problem you're trying to solve. For example, you can do a multi-item patch test at a dermatologist's office to try to narrow down the cause of an allergy or ongoing issue; that's not what we're doing here. For skincare products that you'll apply daily, you can follow these guidelines from the American Academy of Dermatology that involve applying the product for several weeks. But for a Halloween makeup look, you just need to know how your skin will handle a day's worth of contact with the product.

How to patch-test Halloween makeup

Apply a small amount of the makeup to the inside of your forearm or elbow, or to another area where skin tends to be sensitive but also not too noticeable. (Other options: the side of your neck, or behind your ear.) Leave it there for 24 hours or as long as possible. Cover it with a bandage if you’re worried about smearing. Check the area for any redness, swelling, itching, or discomfort.

And that's it. If the makeup irritates your skin, you shouldn’t wear it. If the makeup is for a kid, make sure you test it on their skin—just because something is fine on your own elbow doesn’t mean it’s all clear for someone else. Remember, people are different. You can also develop an allergy or sensitivity to something you’ve worn without issue in the past.

For extra assurance that your makeup won’t cause problems, check the ingredients against the FDA’s list of allowed color additives in cosmetics,. Note that there is a column for "eye area," indicating whether or not the product is considered safe to use around the eyes. Many ingredients that are approved for skin on the face are not approved for use around the eyes, since the eyes can be more sensitive.

For more advice on protecting your eyes, the Optometrists Network also recommends following package instructions carefully, looking for hypoallergenic products, and avoiding eye glitter "at all costs." Shimmery eyeshadow is their pick for getting some sparkle around your eyes—and you might want to test that, too.

On Tuesday, Google announced that it had made a power purchase agreement for electricity generated by a small modular nuclear reactor design that hasn't even received regulatory approval yet. Today, it's Amazon's turn. The company's Amazon Web Services (AWS) group has announced three different investments, including one targeting a different startup that has its own design for small, modular nuclear reactors—one that has not yet received regulatory approval.

Unlike Google's deal, which is a commitment to purchase power should the reactors ever be completed, Amazon will lay out some money upfront as part of the agreements. We'll take a look at the deals and technology that Amazon is backing before analyzing why companies are taking a risk on unproven technologies.

Money for utilities and a startup

Two of Amazon's deals are with utilities that serve areas where it already has a significant data center footprint. One of these is Energy Northwest, which is an energy supplier that sends power to utilities in the Pacific Northwest. Amazon is putting up the money for Energy Northwest to study the feasibility of adding small modular reactors to its Columbia Generating Station, which currently houses a single, large reactor. In return, Amazon will get the right to purchase power from an initial installation of four small modular reactors. The site could potentially support additional reactors, which Energy Northwest would be able to use to meet demands from other users.

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source https://arstechnica.com/science/2024/10/amazon-the-latest-tech-giant-to-announce-investments-in-nuclear/

Wednesday 16 October 2024

Traded its shares between 2018 and 2020? You could cash in

Old accusations of securities fraud continue to dog VMware, with the virtualization juggernaut agreeing to pay $102.5 million to settle a shareholder suit over its alleged creation of an artificial sales backlog to hide slowing sales.…



source https://go.theregister.com/feed/www.theregister.com/2024/10/15/vmware_securities_fraud_settle/
A tool for red-team operations called EDRSilencer has been observed in malicious incidents attempting to identify security tools and mute their alerts to management consoles. [...]

source https://www.bleepingcomputer.com/news/security/edrsilencer-red-team-tool-used-in-attacks-to-bypass-security/

Sadly, iPads don't come with a stylus. This means you have to buy them separately, adding to an already expensive iPad. And Apple pencils are not cheap, with the majority of them going over $100. Luckily for you, the best Apple stylus, the Apple Pencil Pro, is $89.99 (originally $129), the lowest price it has been according to price-checking tools.

If you have one of the latest iPads, you can take advantage of the Pencil Pro, which came out earlier this summer with an "outstanding" review from PCMag. The stylus is designed for artists and creators, with advanced features for sketching, wireless charging, Find My support, and it magnetically attaches to the iPad to pair it and charge.

If you have one of the following M2 and M4 iPads, your device is compatible with the Apple Pencil Pro:

Surprisingly, this newer Pencil Pro costs the same as the 2nd generation Apple Pencil (although you can find it for $10 cheaper right now), making it an easy choice over the older stylus. The stylus has a gyroscope that lets you do a barrel roll gesture (so you can twist the stylus so your strokes can be angled), sensors that allow for pinch actions to pop options up (similar to right-clicking on a mouse), and a haptic engine that vibrates to give you feedback so you know when your commands are being received by the stylus.

If you have one of the compatible iPads and want to make the most out of the tablets, the Pencil Pro lets you unlock features—and if you're an artist or creator, it's a must at this current price.

No matter who you are, where you live, or what your circumstances are, you have to eat. And increasingly that’s a challenge for a broad swath of America—grocery costs have risen dramatically in recent years, posing a real financial hardship for a lot of people and leading to some questionable solutions.

Incredibly, these high grocery costs exist side by side with enormous levels of food waste—to the tune of 92 billion pounds of food wasted each year. That number includes all the food tossed by stores after its sell-by date, all the food restaurants throw away, and all the food we scrape into the garbage after dinner. But about 16% of food waste in America happens on the farm before it even gets to the consumer.

That’s part of the problem—but also part of the solution. Because if you’re struggling to afford groceries, a gleaning market might be the budget-saving solution you need.

What is "gleaning"?

Gleaning” is an ancient term (it’s found in the Bible) that refers to scouring farmer’s fields for leftover or missed produce. Gleanings can be food rejected for aesthetic or other reasons or surplus food resulting from over-production—if a farmer miscalculates how big their crop will be and lacks the ability to sell off the extra food, they can allow it to be gleaned and donated. There are numerous federal and state tax incentives to encourage gleaning by farmers, in fact.

Gleaning takes food that would otherwise end up in dumpsters and landfill and makes it available to people in need, either through food banks and other charities or at low-cost markets. This work is mostly done by volunteers organized by nonprofit groups like the National Gleaning Project—people travel to local farms and glean produce left in the fields after mechanical harvesting or in areas that weren’t profitable for the farmer to harvest. If you’re struggling with your grocery bills, finding a gleaning market near you can save you a lot of money—while making your grocery hauls a lot healthier.

Where to glean

Gleaning markets—sometimes called “salvage grocers”—are located in local communities all over the country. In New Jersey, for example, The Foodshed Alliance runs the LocalShare program, which gleans food from local farms, and maintains an app you can use to find gleaning markets and other resources. You can also just do a Google search focused on your area, and the National Gleaning Project maintains a map of gleaning organizations you can use to find local markets. Buy Salvaged Food also offers a map of salvage grocers. A popular online option for gleaned/salvaged food is Misfits Market.

Some gleaning and salvage markets are run like any other grocery store, just with gleaned and salvaged goods for sale—for example, Town Talk Foods in Texas repackages gleaned and salvaged food and sells it at a large discount, but anyone can shop there. Other gleaning markets have a membership-style program with a monthly fee (the fee is often pegged to your income), but then allow you to simply take what you need from the shelves within some basic limits. One person posted on Reddit that their local gleaning market would save them $1,000 every month on groceries for their large family after paying a monthly fee of less than $80.

Tuesday 15 October 2024

Horror freaks, October is your time to shine. This is the month for planning your Halloween costume, terrifying your neighbors with unsettling decorations, and mainlining scary podcasts.

If you're looking for a haunting aural experience this spooky season, here are 10 shows full of ghosts, murders, and haunted hallways for days. (And don’t miss my additional suggestions for more scary horror podcasts to listen this Halloween, and, if you're concerned about terrifying yourself a bit too much, this list of the best scary podcasts ranked by scariness level.)


Caribbean Mystics

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On Caribbean Mystics, hosts Paulina and Gabrielle highlight supernatural tales that take place in the Caribbean region. A storyteller shares their own spooky experience, then Paulina and Gabrielle come on mic to supply us with the cultural and historical background, and their own impressions. Caribbean Mystics offers highly produced stories told by the people who experienced, mixed with a fun hangout session between friends.


Ghost Story

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Hosted by Tristan Redman, Ghost Story is the perfect podcast if you’re looking for something murder-y and ghosty. Tristan starts out explaining that weird things used to happen in his bedroom when he was a teenager, even though he doesn’t believe in ghosts. Later he finds out that people who lived in the house after he moved away saw strange things too. Oddly, his childhood home is next door to the home where his wife’s great grandmother was murdered in the early 1900s. Could these events be connected? It's certainly a lot spookier if you entertain the notion.


Haunting

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Lauren Lapkus is known for being one of the funnest improv comedians in the podcast biz. On her new show Haunting, she’s playing the fictional character Therésa, a dead influencer from the other side (finally some undead representation!) sharing non-fiction stories from the real people. Spookiness and silliness in equal measure.


Other World

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On Other World, host Jack Wagner lets listeners tell their own scary stories, serving as the curious but neutral host, asking inquisitive questions, and letting the listener come to their own conclusions about what really happened. Whether you believe the stories are true or not, Jack does a great job showing us how, at the very least, they have changed the storytellers' lives.


Dark House

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If you had asked me to guess what kind of podcast we’d get out of the publication House Beautiful, I would never guess it’d be something so scary. Dark House is, appropriately enough, about interior design, but it’s also about the intersection of true crime and the paranormal: Beautiful homes with histories of hauntings, murders, the unexplained, and more. Magazine editors Hadley Mendelsohn and Alyssa Fiorento bring on authors, set designers, psychic mediums, and paranormal investigators to understand why we’re so obsessed with haunted houses, and to delve into what they tell us about our culture. 


The Haunted Objects Podcast

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The Haunted Objects Podcast is hosted by paranormal researchers Greg and Dana Newkirk, known for their work with haunted objects and supernatural investigations. They delve into the strange and eerie world of haunted artifacts, with discussions on various objects from their personal collection, which is part of their Traveling Museum of the Paranormal & Occult. They talk about the objects’ chilling histories, involvement in mysterious occurrences, and the supernatural phenomena associated with them, delving into how they affected thr lives (or deaths?) of their previous owners.


Tower 4

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If you prefer to get your night terrors from audio dramas, Tower 4 will provide you with more than your fair share. It’s part mystery, part suspense, and part psychological thriller. Mike Arche takes a job as a fire lookout in a remote tower located deep in the Wyoming wilderness. It isn’t long before he starts experiencing strange sounds, mysterious radio transmissions from another nearby tower, and general oddness. It’s a narrative so immersive, you’ll share Mike's feelings of isolation. 


Lore

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Lore delves into the eerie and unsettling side of history, folklore, and mythology. On every episode Aaron Mahnke invites listeners into the darker corners of human nature, superstition, and unexplained phenomena through discussions of real-life historical events and legendary tales. He mixes storytelling and research with tales of ghosts, creatures, mysterious deaths, and more. The stories are made all the more immersive by the atmospheric production and haunting music.


Limetown

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Limetown is an immersive, realistic sci-fi mystery that feels and sounds just like investigative journalism—so much so that many listeners initially thought that it was real. The story centers on the disappearance of over 300 people from a research facility in a small town (called Limetown). The protagonist, Lia Haddock, a journalist for American Public Radio, investigates what happened to the missing people, leading her down a path of conspiracy, government secrets, and strange experiments involving mind control. (The show was later adapted into a TV series starring Jessica Biel.)


Radio Rental

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Radio Rental places you in a fictional 1980s movie rental store (essentially a haunted Blockbuster) run by eccentric host Terry Carnation (voiced by ˆ’s Rainn Wilson) and his cat, Malechai. Terry is the scary story DJ spinning real-life tales that range from the spine-tingling to the bizarre, shared straight from the source. Produced in a documentary-esque style, the show collects stories of close encounters with serial killers and unexplainable brushes with the other side that will make you question your ordinary, every-day interactions, and remind you that something worth fearing could be lurking around every corner.

Tech headlines are abuzz this morning about a new AI scam targeting Google users. Forbes published a piece detailing two experiences with scammers, both of which involved likely AI-generated phone calls and multi-step schemes. Here's the thing, though: These scams aren't necessarily "new," and you should be wary of them—whether the actor purports to be from Google or not.

Watch out for these Google Account scams

Forbes' reporting highlights two specific but similar examples of this type of scam: One victim, Sam Mitrovic of Microsoft, received an alert regarding an account recovery request, which, when legitimate, are usually triggered when someone forgets their password. Because unprompted account recovery requests are often malicious in nature, Mitrovic ignore the alert, but received a phone call from "Google Support" just 40 minutes later. Mitrovic ignored this call, too, but soon after, received another alert followed 40 minutes later by a "Google Support" call.

This time, Mitrovic answered, to find a "representative" with an American accent who asked if Mitrovic had traveled recently, particularly to Germany. The answer was no, which lead the representative to warn Mitrovic that someone had been accessing their account from Germany for the past seven days, and had already downloaded data from the account. Mitrovic even googled the phone number "Google Support" was calling from, and found it lead to this official Google Support page. At first glance, you might think that confirms this is actually Google Support, but read the page closer, and you'll see this phone number is the number Google Assistant calls businesses from, not Google Support. This was, in the end, a scam.

Forbes' other example concerns Garry Tan, founder of Y Combinator, who reports he was also targeted in a similar scam. Tan also received a call from "Google Support," claiming that they had Tan's death certificate, and a family member was trying to use it to access Tan's account. Google Support was calling to both confirm that Tan was actually alive, and to share an account recovery request that Tan could use to "confirm" his account was active. That last bit is the real scam: Tan highlights that the account recovery request was definitely fraudulent, as the "device" the request was coming from said Google Support, not an actual device. Someone is spoofing that field, and if Tan had hit "Yes, it's me" on the alert, the attacker would have been able to reset the password on Tan's Google Account.

While it can't be confirmed, it appears the phone calls used in each example were AI-powered. Mitrovic and Tan both confirm the voices were convincing, but in Mitrovic's case, the "caller" said "hello," and, after no response, said "hello" the same way again. That, coupled with perfect pronunciation and spacing, convinced Mitrovic the voice was actually AI—telltale signs of generative AI-powered audio.

In practice, this scam is nothing new

While the news is buzzing about this new type of AI-powered scam, the underlying tactics here are pretty classic. You can protect yourself by knowing what to look out for, whether the attackers use AI or not.

First, big tech companies like Google simply don't call you out of the blue to warn you about a potential security breach with your account. In fact, Google, and companies like it, are notorious for their lack of human-based support in general. If you can't get in touch with a real person when you knowingly need help, there's no shot a Google rep is going to reach out to you first. So, whether it's a convincing AI-powered voice on the other end of the phone, or a pretty terrible human actor pretending to be a live Google representative, receiving a call from a company like this should be a large enough red flag to ignore the situation.

On the flip side, we have the account recovery request. This is a textbook scam method: Trigger an account recovery alert on the user's end, and convince them accepting it means they're confirming their identity. That is simply not what this system is designed for, and it's what hackers are counting on you to fall for. Account recovery requests are supposed to be triggered by you whenever you are otherwise unable to access your account, perhaps in the event that someone has actually hacked your account. You tell Google that, and they send an account recovery request to your attached email address. You open that email, click "Yes, it's me," and you're able to continue on with your account recovery process. No one else is involved in the process, and the request isn't used for any other purpose.

Hackers, however, will pretend to be from Google Support, and say that this account recovery request is just a way to confirm your identity, or that your account is active. However, when you click that "Yes, it's me" button, what you've done is trigger the account recovery process on their end. They now have the power to get into your account, and potentially lock you out of it and steal your information.

Bottom line: If you did not trigger that account recovery alert yourself, it's not legitimate. Do not click on it.

If you're worried about being hacked

If you receive a phone call or a message like this, it's likely a bad actor looking for a phishing victim. Without your input, they will simply move on to another victim. However, it's not a bad idea to run through some steps to make sure your account is actively protected.

Focusing on Google, you can go to your Google Account's Security settings page to review a dashboard of your account's security health. Here's where you'll see all your active sessions, whether Google has any security alerts for you to manage, and settings for things like two-factor authentication, passwords, passkeys, recovery emails, and phone numbers, among others.

If you're worried about your account's current security level, look at your active sessions: This is where you're currently logged into. If you don't recognize a device or a location, you can click on it and sign that device out of your account. Just know if you're using a VPN, or Apple's iCloud Private Relay, you may see sessions from unknown locations on your trusted devices, as these services obfuscate where your actual internet traffic is coming from.

In addition, it's a great idea to change your password every now and then, and ensure you're using two-factor authentication (2FA). That way, if an attacker does figure out your password, you have a secondary authentication step that requires a trusted device—something the attacker likely does not have. Consider setting up passkeys as well, which combined the best of both worlds between passwords and 2FA.

At the end of the day, attackers employing these scams can't actually break into your account themselves—that's why they're targeting you. They need you to click on their malicious links or authenticate yourself on their behalf. So long as your password is strong, and you have other forms of authentication as a backup, the best way to avoid being a victim in these types of scams is to simply ignore them.

Monday 14 October 2024

Plus: Infosys stops sending job offer emails; Singtel outage; Australia to require ransomware payment reveals

Indonesia's government last week ordered Apple and Google to remove Chinese e-commerce app Temu from their app stores.…



source https://go.theregister.com/feed/www.theregister.com/2024/10/13/asia_tech_news_roundup/
Google's Chrome Web Store is now warning that the uBlock Origin ad blocker and other extensions may soon be blocked as part of the company's deprecation of the Manifest V2 extension specification. [...]

source https://www.bleepingcomputer.com/news/google/google-warns-ublock-origin-and-other-extensions-may-be-disabled-soon/

Next up in my backlog of news to cover: the US Department of Justice’s proposed remedies for Google’s monopolistic abuse.

Now that Judge Amit Mehta has found Google is a monopolist, lawyers for the Department of Justice have begun proposing solutions to correct the company’s illegal behavior and restore competition to the market for search engines. In a new 32-page filing (included below), they said they are considering both “behavioral and structural remedies.“

That covers everything from applying a consent decree to keep an eye on the company’s behavior to forcing it to sell off parts of its business, such as Chrome, Android, or Google Play.

↫ Richard Lawler at The Verge

While I think it would be a great idea to break Google up, such an action taken in a vacuum seems to be rather pointless. Say Google is forced to spin off Android into a separate company – how is that relatively small Android, Inc. going to compete with the behemoth that is Apple and its iOS to which such restrictions do not apply? How is Chrome Ltd. going to survive Microsoft’s continued attempts at forcing Edge down our collective throats? Being a dedicated browser maker is working out great for Firefox, right?

This is the problem with piecemeal, retroactive measures to try and “correct” a market position that you have known for years is being abused – sure, this would knock Google down a peg, but other, even larger megacorporations like Apple or Microsoft will be the ones to benefit most, not any possible new companies or startups. This is exactly why a market-wide, equally-applied set of rules and regulations, like the European Union’s Digital Markets Act, is a far better and more sustainable approach.

Unless similar remedies are applied to Google’s massive competitors, these Google-specific remedies will most likely only make things worse, not better, for the American consumer.



source https://www.osnews.com/story/140904/a-google-breakup-is-on-the-table-say-doj-lawyers/

Sunday 13 October 2024

After performing an in-place upgrade to Windows 11 version 24H2, the system will keep a copy of the previous installation, but you can always delete these files to free up space. In this guide, I'll show you two ways to complete this task.

source https://www.windowscentral.com/software-apps/windows-11/how-to-reclaim-space-after-upgrading-to-windows-10-2024-update-version-24h2
After performing an in-place upgrade to Windows 11 version 24H2, the system will keep a copy of the previous installation, but you can always delete these files to free up space. In this guide, I'll show you two ways to complete this task.

OpenAI has disrupted over 20 malicious cyber operations abusing its AI-powered chatbot, ChatGPT, for debugging and developing malware, spreading misinformation, evading detection, and conducting spear-phishing attacks. [...]

source https://www.bleepingcomputer.com/news/security/openai-confirms-threat-actors-use-chatgpt-to-write-malware/

Saturday 12 October 2024

When the 'cleanup' option stubbornly refuses

Windows 11 24H2 users are finding there is undeletable data that remains on their devices after installing the recently released feature update.…



source https://go.theregister.com/feed/www.theregister.com/2024/10/11/windows_update_cleanup/

Banks aren’t just a necessary place to stash your cash, they serve a deep community purpose. They offer financing for businesses and major purchases, like a car or a house, as well as a long list of other financial services. Many of those services cost money in the form of fees—but most banks offer at least a few free services that you should definitely be taking advantage of.

Here are three useful services you can probably get from yours for free (and if your bank doesn’t offer them, maybe it’s time to look for one that does.)

Financial planning

Managing your money can be a complex and confusing job if you’re not a numbers person (or even if you are), so having a professional review your financial situation and offer advice and strategies can be invaluable. And expensive—fees for financial planners can run into the thousands each year.

One way to avoid those fees is to find out if your bank offers financial planning services. While you usually have to have a certain amount of money in the bank in order to qualify to use them, they might still be free in the sense that there’s no extra fee to take advantage of a consultation. Not every bank does this, but many of the larger banks allow you to sit down and consult with a financial advisor who can help you figure out investments, retirement accounts, and savings strategies at no cost. If you’re not sure how to handle your money, it might be worth making a phone call or stopping in at your local branch to see if they offer financial planning at no extra cost.

Notary services

A notary is one of those things you don’t think about until you need one, and when you need one, it’s almost impossible to find one that’s nearby and available. When that day comes, you should call your bank, because many banks have at least one person on their staff who is a certified notary. Notaries aren’t terribly expensive—fees range from $5 to $25 depending on the service you need and where you live—but if you don’t have to pay a fee because your bank offers the services to its customers, why would you pay it?

Currency exchanges

If you’re traveling, you’ll want to exchange currency before you leave in order to avoid extra costs and inconvenience. Your bank is almost always going to be the cheapest place to do so, and if you exchange a certain amount of money (typically $1,000 or more) they’ll even do it for free. Some banks don’t even have an amount limit—PNC Bank will exchange currency for its customers with no fee, for example. If you’re going on a trip and need some local money, it’s worth checking if your bank will do this for you for free.

This isn't an exhaustive list, and your bank may offer additional free services (the startup online bank Varo, for example, offers free tax filing services), so it's worth investigating and taking advantage of everything you can.

We love all the feedback that Ars readers have submitted since we rolled out the Ars Technica 9.0 design last week—even the, err, deeply passionate remarks. It's humbling that, after 26 years, so many people still care so much about making Ars into the best possible version of itself.

Based on your feedback, we've just pushed a new update to the site that we hope fixes many readers' top concerns. (You might need to hard-refresh to see it.)

Much of the feedback (forum posts, email, DMs, the Ars comment form) has told us that the chief goals of the redesign—more layout options, larger text, better readability—were successful. But readers have also offered up interesting edge cases and different use patterns for which design changes would be useful. Though we can't please everyone, we will continue to make iterative design tweaks so that the site can work well for as many people as possible.

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source https://arstechnica.com/staff/2024/10/ars-9-0-1-redesign-is-now-live-with-density-tweaks-and-visited-link-colors/

Friday 11 October 2024

Less VRAM than promised, but still gobs more than Hopper

AMD boosted the VRAM on its Instinct accelerators to 256 GB of HBM3e with the launch of its next-gen MI325X AI accelerators during its Advancing AI event in San Francisco on Thursday.…



source https://go.theregister.com/feed/www.theregister.com/2024/10/10/amd_mi325x_ai_gpu/
U.S. and U.K. cyber agencies warned today that APT29 hackers linked to Russia's Foreign Intelligence Service (SVR) target vulnerable Zimbra and JetBrains TeamCity servers "at a mass scale." [...]

source https://www.bleepingcomputer.com/news/security/us-uk-warn-of-russian-apt29-hackers-targeting-zimbra-teamcity-servers/

October Prime Day came and went, but competition sales are still going strong. Walmart's sale goes on until Oct. 13, and Target's Circle Week sale is also still active. October Prime Day usually marks the start of the holiday shopping season, but Target has been pulling a fast one on Amazon lately, beginning their competition sale before Amazon's for two years in a row and finishing it later. Here is everything you need to know about Target Circle Week.

What (and how long) is Target Circle Week?

Target Circle Week is a fall sale from Target that lasts a whole week. It has been starting before Amazon's Prime Big Deals Day in October, which only lasts two days, and lasts past the sale. It's a sale that was created in response to October Prime Day, along with Best Buy's and Walmart's own sale.

According to Target's press release, Target Circle Week will run from Oct. 6 through Oct. 12. That's three days after Amazon's October Prime Day, giving you plenty of time in case you missed the big sale and still do your fall and holiday shopping.

Do you need to be a member to shop for Target Circle Week?

Like Amazon's October Prime Day sale, you will need to be a Circle member to take part in the sale, but unlike being a Prime Member, membership is free. You can sign up on the Target app or Target.com.

What deals can I find on Target Circle Week?

Target has deals to prep for the holidays, savings on "fall favorites," everyday essentials, and "more." You can shop in person or online. Their 24-hour Deal of the Day sale is also making a comeback starting on Nov. 1 through the "rest of the season." You can find over half of their holiday toys for $20 and under, and thousands of stocking stuffers under $5. If you're looking for Disney, LEGO, FAO Schwarz, Papatui, Being Frenshe, and Fine'ry deals, Circle Week has them all.

A lot of the Circle Week deals were matched by Amazon, and some still are. But where Target shines over Amazon is in specific home and kitchen appliances that you can't find (or are hard to find) on Amazon. Here are some you can shop already:

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