E-Mail-Phishing mit KI: ChatGPT und die Zukunft des Social Engineering

Vertrauen aufzubauen ist der Schlüssel zu erfolgreichem Social Engineering. ChatGPT liefert Unterstützung, indem es authentische Mails und Gesprächsverläufe schreibt. Eine Risikoanalyse. Von Christina Lekati (ChatGPT, KI)

Vertrauen aufzubauen ist der Schlüssel zu erfolgreichem Social Engineering. ChatGPT liefert Unterstützung, indem es authentische Mails und Gesprächsverläufe schreibt. Eine Risikoanalyse. Von Christina Lekati (ChatGPT, KI)

Writers Strike: Streik der Drehbuchautoren könnte Hollywood lahmlegen

Streaming-Anbieter sind nicht auf die Forderungen der Gewerkschaft eingegangen. Der letzte Streik hat 100 Tage gedauert und zu verkürzten Serienstaffeln geführt. (Streaming, Apple TV)

Streaming-Anbieter sind nicht auf die Forderungen der Gewerkschaft eingegangen. Der letzte Streik hat 100 Tage gedauert und zu verkürzten Serienstaffeln geführt. (Streaming, Apple TV)

T-Mobile discloses 2nd data breach of 2023, this one leaking account PINs and more

Hack affecting 836 subscribers, lasted for more than a month before it was discovered.

A bird sits on top of a T-Mobile sign outside a mobile phone store,

Enlarge (credit: Getty Images | Bloomberg)

T-Mobile on Monday said it experienced a hack that exposed account PINs and other customer data in the company's second network intrusion this year and the ninth since 2018.

The intrusion, which started on February 24 and lasted until March 30, affected 836 customers, according to a notification on the website of Maine Attorney General Aaron Frey.

“The information obtained for each customer varied but may have included full name, contact information, account number and associated phone numbers, T-Mobile account PIN, social security number, government ID, date of birth, balance due, internal codes that T-Mobile uses to service customer accounts (for example, rate plan and feature codes), and the number of lines,” the company wrote in a letter sent to affected customers. Account PINs, which customers use to swap out SIM cards and authorize other important changes to their accounts, were reset once T-Mobile discovered the breach on March 27.

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T-Mobile discloses 2nd data breach of 2023, this one leaking account PINs and more

Hack affecting 836 subscribers, lasted for more than a month before it was discovered.

A bird sits on top of a T-Mobile sign outside a mobile phone store,

Enlarge (credit: Getty Images | Bloomberg)

T-Mobile on Monday said it experienced a hack that exposed account PINs and other customer data in the company's second network intrusion this year and the ninth since 2018.

The intrusion, which started on February 24 and lasted until March 30, affected 836 customers, according to a notification on the website of Maine Attorney General Aaron Frey.

“The information obtained for each customer varied but may have included full name, contact information, account number and associated phone numbers, T-Mobile account PIN, social security number, government ID, date of birth, balance due, internal codes that T-Mobile uses to service customer accounts (for example, rate plan and feature codes), and the number of lines,” the company wrote in a letter sent to affected customers. Account PINs, which customers use to swap out SIM cards and authorize other important changes to their accounts, were reset once T-Mobile discovered the breach on March 27.

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Physicists unlock secret of why champagne bubbles form straight chain as they rise

Surfactants give champagne its signature stable rising column of bubbles.

hand pouring champagne from a bottle into two fluted glasses

Enlarge / Researchers investigated the stability of bubble chains in carbonated drinks like champagne and sparkling wine. (credit: Madeline Federle and Colin Sullivan)

Brown University physicist Roberto Zenit has a knack for tying his fundamental fluid dynamics research to everyday phenomena, like enjoying a glass of champagne with friends. He noticed one day that the bubbles rising to the surface form stable vertical columns, unlike other carbonated beverages, where the wake of rising bubbles knocks other bubbles sideways so that multiple bubbles rise simultaneously. Zenit found that this is because surfactant molecules coat the champagne bubbles and encourage more swirling, thereby disrupting the wake, according to a new paper published in the journal Physical Review Fluids.

"Just observing a glass of a liquid super-saturated with carbon dioxide is like having a laboratory in front of you," Zenit told Ars. "It's a very good example of trying to understand hydrodynamic interactions. When two bubbles are moving one behind the other, they usually become misaligned because they create a disturbance in the liquid around them. We realized this was very different for champagne. If you know anything about bubble dynamics, that's not natural, so of course we were instantly intrigued."

Zenit has previously analyzed the fluid dynamics of modern painting techniques and materials pioneered by such luminaries as muralist David Siqueiros and Jackson Pollock, both of whom Zenit considers "intuitive physicists." Siqueiros' famous "accidental painting" technique involved pouring layers of paint on a horizontal surface and letting whorls, blobs, and other shapes form over time. The trick is to place a dense fluid on top of a lighter one to create a classic instability because the heavier liquid will push through the lighter one. According to Zenit, Pollock's dripping technique relied upon the same instability to produce curly lines and spots on his canvases.

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