Netflix, Disney+, Prime Video und Co.: US-Abonnenten kündigen Streamingabos häufiger

In den USA werden die werbefinanzierten Abos immer beliebter. Während Netflix und Disney direkt davon profitieren, müssen sich Kunden mit Nachteilen bei den Aboleistungen abfinden. (Streaming, Amazon)

In den USA werden die werbefinanzierten Abos immer beliebter. Während Netflix und Disney direkt davon profitieren, müssen sich Kunden mit Nachteilen bei den Aboleistungen abfinden. (Streaming, Amazon)

Anzeige: Mit Kubernetes und Ansible in die Cloudzukunft

Ohne die Cloud geht heute an vielen Stellen nicht mehr viel. Vier Live-Remote-Workshops der Golem Karrierewelt vermitteln die Grundlagen klassischer Cloudthemen. (Golem Karrierewelt, Server-Applikationen)

Ohne die Cloud geht heute an vielen Stellen nicht mehr viel. Vier Live-Remote-Workshops der Golem Karrierewelt vermitteln die Grundlagen klassischer Cloudthemen. (Golem Karrierewelt, Server-Applikationen)

Mandiant, the security firm Google bought for $5.4 billion, gets its X account hacked

Scammer impersonates legitimate cryptocurrency wallet, then pivots to trolling Mandiant.

Mandiant, the security firm Google bought for $5.4 billion, gets its X account hacked

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Google-owned security firm Mandiant spent several hours trying to regain control of its account on X (formerly known as Twitter) on Wednesday after an unknown scammer hijacked it and used it to spread a link that attempted to steal cryptocurrency from people who clicked on it.

“We are aware of the incident impacting the Mandiant X account and are working to resolve the issue,” company officials wrote in a statement. “We've since regained control over the account and are currently working on restoring it.” The statement didn’t answer questions asking if the company had determined how the account was compromised.

The hacked Mandiant account was initially used to masquerade as one belonging to Phantom, a company that offers a wallet for storing cryptocurrency. Posts on X encouraged people to visit a malicious website to see if their wallet was one of 250,000 that were eligible for an award of tokens. Over several hours, X employees played tug-of-war with the unknown scammer, with scam posts being removed only to reappear, according to people who followed the events.

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Forget the proverbial wisdom: Opposites don’t really attract, study finds

Educational attainment, substance use were most common shared traits among couples.

What draws us to choose romantic partners? A sweeping new meta-analysis suggests we gravitate toward certain shared traits.

What draws us to choose romantic partners? A sweeping new meta-analysis suggests we gravitate toward certain shared traits. (credit: Muramasa)

There's rarely time to write about every cool science-y story that comes our way. So this year, we're once again running a special Twelve Days of Christmas series of posts, highlighting one science story that fell through the cracks in 2023, each day from December 25 through January 5. Today: a broad meta-analysis spanning over a century of studies finds that opposites don't really attract when it comes to choosing a mate.

We've all heard the common folk wisdom that when it comes to forming romantic partnerships, opposites attract. Researchers at the University of Colorado, Boulder, contend that this proverbial wisdom is largely false, based on the findings of their sweeping September study, published in the journal Nature Human Behavior. The saying, "birds of a feather flock together," is a more apt summation of how we choose our partners.

“These findings suggest that even in situations where we feel like we have a choice about our relationships, there may be mechanisms happening behind the scenes of which we aren't fully aware,” said co-author Tanya Horwitz, a psychology and neuroscience graduate student at UCB. “We’re hoping people can use this data to do their own analyses and learn more about how and why people end up in the relationships they do.”

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