Nepal: Wochen der Wahrheit

Nichts bringt die wahren Strukturen besser ans Licht als eine Krise. Diese Erfahrung macht man in Nepal innerhalb weniger Jahre gerade mit Corona zum zweiten Mal

Nichts bringt die wahren Strukturen besser ans Licht als eine Krise. Diese Erfahrung macht man in Nepal innerhalb weniger Jahre gerade mit Corona zum zweiten Mal

Nahost-Krieg: Wer erreicht die Waffenruhe?

US-Präsident Biden spricht sich für Ende der Kampfhandlungen aus. EU auf der Suche nach gemeinsamer Position. Opferzahlen steigen vor allem in Gaza

US-Präsident Biden spricht sich für Ende der Kampfhandlungen aus. EU auf der Suche nach gemeinsamer Position. Opferzahlen steigen vor allem in Gaza

Biden pledges to share 20 million COVID-19 vaccine doses with the world

The 20 million will be in addition to 60 million AstraZeneca doses already pledged.

An older man in a suit speaks casually from behind a podium.

Enlarge / President Joe Biden speaks to a member of the media after delivering remarks in the East Room of the White House with Vice President Kamala Harris, left, in Washington, DC, on Monday, May 17, 2021. Biden plans to send an additional 20 million doses of vaccines abroad by the end of June. (credit: Getty | Bloomberg)

President Joe Biden announced on Monday that the United States will share at least 20 million doses of Pfizer-BioNTech, Moderna, and Johnson & Johnson COVID-19 vaccines with other countries over the next six weeks.

The pledged doses will be in addition to 60 million stockpiled doses of AstraZeneca’s vaccine the administration has previously said it will donate after they’re cleared by the Food and Drug Administration.

The announcement comes amid mounting pressure for the US and other rich nations to share doses with low- and middle-income countries, some of which are struggling with COVID-19 surges amid a dearth of doses. It also comes as the US has a glut of vaccine doses and is now struggling to convince a vaccine-hesitant portion of the population to take the available shots.

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Lilbits: Intel Tiger Lake-H reviews, Optane memory H20 coming soon, and Photoshop comes to Windows on ARM

Intel’s 11th-gen, 45-watt laptop processors have arrived, and the embargo on reviews lifted today. The good news is that the new Intel chips really do offer some of the best performance of any x86 processor in this class… when it comes to …

Intel Tiger Lake-H

Intel Tiger Lake-HIntel’s 11th-gen, 45-watt laptop processors have arrived, and the embargo on reviews lifted today. The good news is that the new Intel chips really do offer some of the best performance of any x86 processor in this class… when it comes to single-threaded performance. But when it comes to multi-threaded performance, AMD’s Ryzen 5000H series […]

The post Lilbits: Intel Tiger Lake-H reviews, Optane memory H20 coming soon, and Photoshop comes to Windows on ARM appeared first on Liliputing.

Apple’s M1 is a fast CPU—but M1 Macs “feel” even faster due to QoS

Howard Oakley did an excellent deep dive on M1 scheduling and performance.

Multiple Apple promotional images are piled on each other.

Enlarge / The Apple M1 is a world-class processor—but it feels even faster than its already-great specs imply. Howard Oakley did a deep-dive investigation to find out why. (credit: SOPA Images via Getty)

Apple's M1 processor is a world-class desktop and laptop processor—but when it comes to general-purpose end-user systems, there's something even better than being fast. We're referring, of course, to feeling fast—which has more to do with a system meeting user expectations predictably and reliably than it does with raw speed.

Howard Oakley—author of several Mac-native utilities such as Cormorant, Spundle, and Stibium—did some digging to find out why his M1 Mac felt faster than Intel Macs did, and he came to the conclusion that the answer is QoS. If you're not familiar with the term, it expands to Quality of Service—and it's all about task scheduling.

More throughput doesn’t always mean happier users

There's a very common tendency to equate "performance" with throughput—roughly speaking, tasks accomplished per unit of time. Although throughput is generally the easiest metric to measure, it doesn't correspond very well with human perception. What humans generally notice isn't throughput, it's latency—not the number of times a task can be accomplished, but the time it takes to complete an individual task.

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Scammers Use Fake Copyright Warnings to Steal Logins and Spread Trojans

It’s no secret that scammers are constantly trying to trick people into downloading malicious content from pirate sites. However, scammers are also targeting people who want to avoid copyright troubles. By sending fake infringement notices, bad actors hope to steal social media credentials and spread trojans.

From: TF, for the latest news on copyright battles, piracy and more.

DangerJust a few weeks ago, we reported how pirates are lured into downloading malware and trojans. However, people who want to avoid copyright troubles are facing similar risks.

As it turns out, fake copyright warnings and takedown notices are commonly used by scammers as well.

These scammers cleverly use the threat that copyright infringement claims pose to recipients. Many website operators fear legal repercussions and are eager to resolve these matters swiftly. Social media users, who risk losing their accounts, are equally concerned.

Fake Twitter Copyright Notices

Just a few days ago, journalist Shayan Sardarizadeh pointed out how scammers are impersonating Twitter support to report fake copyright infringements. If the recipient fails to respond within 48 hours, their account will be suspended, the message claims.

“Copyright infringement was detected in one of the tweets on your account. If you think copyright infringement is wrong, you need to provide feedback. Otherwise, your account will be suspended within 48 hours,” the direct message reads.

twitter copyright scam

This scam isn’t new. In fact, it pops up regularly. In this case, the scammers are phishing for account credentials, which is happening on other social media sites too, including Instagram.

Those who pay careful attention to the language deployed and the username that sent the DM won’t fall for the scam. However, when facing an account suspension, some people may lose sight of these details.

Tareting Blogs and News Sites

A somewhat more elaborate version of this copyright warning scam is targeting individual site operators. In those cases, scammers use contact forms and comment sections to alert blog and news site operators that copyrighted images were posted without permission.

There are several versions of this scam circulating but many use a variant of the following message, which is sent under different names.

My name is Tania.

Your website or a website that your company hosts is infringing on a copyright-protected images owned by myself.

Take a look at this document with the links to my images you used at www.randomsite.com and my earlier publications to get the evidence of my copyrights.

Download it right now and check this out for yourself:

—- scammy https://sites.google.com/view/XXX link —-

I believe you have willfully infringed my rights under 17 U.S.C. Section 101 et seq. and could be liable for statutory damages as high as $150,000 as set forth in Section 504(c)(2) of the Digital Millennium Copyright Act (”DMCA”) therein.

This letter is official notification. I seek the removal of the infringing material referenced above. Please take note as a service provider, the Digital Millennium Copyright Act requires you, to remove or disable access to the infringing materials upon receipt of this notice. If you do not cease the use of the aforementioned copyrighted material a lawsuit will be commenced against you.

I have a good faith belief that use of the copyrighted materials described above as allegedly infringing is not authorized by the copyright owner, its agent, or the law.

I swear, under penalty of perjury, that the information in the notification is accurate and that I am the copyright owner or am authorized to act on behalf of the owner of an exclusive right that is allegedly infringed.

Best regards,
Tania Ortega

Careful readers will notice that there are several mistakes in the notice. However, in their panic, some people may simply read over these errors. Instead, they will click on the Google link where they can download a “Copyright Infringement Evidence” package.

scam copyright infringement package

Needless to say, downloading and running these files will infect people’s computers with all kinds of nastiness. Google takes these links down when they are reported and we couldn’t find a live one. However, Techlicious linked one package to a Ransomware trojan.

The comment and contact form scam appears to be widespread. Numerous site owners have received variations of a similar message over the past few days. While many recognize it as a scam, it’s not hard to imagine that some will fall for it.

All in all, it is safe to conclude that pirates are not the only ones who risk running into malware and trojans. On the contrary, those who want to avoid copyright troubles at all costs are actively targeted as well.

From: TF, for the latest news on copyright battles, piracy and more.