Hundreds of people had been about to enter the water to compete in the Manly Open Surf carnival.
Peru protests rage on despite president’s plea for calm
Stone-throwing protesters fought pitched battles with police at fresh demonstrations demanding the resignation of Peruvian President Dina Boluarte on Friday, while several hundred tourists were left stranded near Machu Picchu.Civil unrest since the o…
Live: Baltic states call on Germany to provide tanks to Ukraine ‘now’
A day after Germany failed to give the green light to supply Ukraine with Leopard 2 tanks, defence ministers of the Baltic states of Latvia, Estonia and Lithuania on Saturday urged Berlin to provide Kyiv the battle tanks “now”. The joint statement, a …
Chris Hipkins set to replace Jacinda Ardern as New Zealand PM
Chris Hipkins, who played a significant role in New Zealand’s response to the COVID-19 pandemic, is set to replace Jacinda Ardern as prime minister after emerging on Saturday as the only candidate to lead the ruling Labour Party. Hipkins, 44, is expec…
Pantsir defensive missile systems appear on Moscow rooftops
submitted by /u/vichistor [link] [comments]
Over 1 million French workers strike against effort to raise retirement age
submitted by /u/jas26 [link] [comments]
Mum given emergency help after giving birth to record-breaking 2ft-tall baby weighing 16lb
Angerson Santos was born via C-section in Brazil on Wednesday and is believed to be the biggest baby born in the state of Amazonas, weighing a massive 16lb and measuring 2ft tall.
Publisher’s Weekly Review of A Hacker’s Mind
Publisher’s Weekly reviewed A Hacker’s Mind—and it’s a starred review!
“Hacking is something that the rich and powerful do, something that reinforces existing power structures,” contends security technologist Schneier (Click Here to Kill Everybody) in this excellent survey of exploitation. Taking a broad understanding of hacking as an “activity allowed by the system that subverts the… system,” Schneier draws on his background analyzing weaknesses in cybersecurity to examine how those with power take advantage of financial, legal, political, and cognitive systems. He decries how venture capitalists “hack” market dynamics by subverting the pressures of supply and demand, noting that venture capital has kept Uber afloat despite the company having not yet turned a profit. Legal loopholes constitute another form of hacking, Schneier suggests, discussing how the inability of tribal courts to try non-Native individuals means that many sexual assaults of Native American women go unprosecuted because they were committed by non-Native American men. Schneier outlines strategies used by corporations to capitalize on neural processes and “hack… our attention circuits,” pointing out how Facebook’s algorithms boost content that outrages users because doing so increases engagement. Elegantly probing the mechanics of exploitation, Schneier makes a persuasive case that “we need society’s rules and laws to be as patchable as your computer.” With lessons that extend far beyond the tech world, this has much to offer…
This Week’s Top Military Photos: Rocket’s White Glare, and ‘Birds’ Floating in the Air
Military.com’s top photos of the week, January 15 – January 20.