Star Trek: Ohne Anson Mount hätte es Strange New Worlds nicht gegeben

Die Welt von Star Trek wächst und gedeiht, aber Strange New Worlds hat seine Existenz Anson Mount und seiner Darstellung von Captain Pike zu verdanken. (Star Trek, Unterhaltung & Hobby)

Die Welt von Star Trek wächst und gedeiht, aber Strange New Worlds hat seine Existenz Anson Mount und seiner Darstellung von Captain Pike zu verdanken. (Star Trek, Unterhaltung & Hobby)

Shadow of the Erdtree has ground me into dust, which is why I recommend it

Souls fans seeking real challenge should love it. Casuals like me might wait.

Image of a fight from Shadow of the Erdtree

Enlarge (credit: Bandai)

Elden Ring was my first leap into FromSoftware titles (and Dark-Souls-like games generally), and I fell in deep. Over more than 200 hours, I ate up the cryptic lore, learned lots of timings, and came to appreciate the feeling of achievement through perseverance.

Months ago, in preparation for Elden Ring's expansion, Shadow of the Erdtree (also on PlayStation and Xbox, arriving June 21), I ditched the save file with which I had beaten the game and started over. I wanted to try out big swords and magic casting. I wanted to try a few new side quests. And I wanted to have a fresh experience with the game before Shadow arrived.

I have had a very fresh experience, in that this DLC has made me feel like I'm still in the first hour of my first game. Reader, this expansion is mopping the floor with me. It looked at my resume, which has "Elden Lord" as its most recent job title, and has tossed it into the slush pile. If you're wondering whether Shadow would, like Elden Ring, provide a different kind of challenge and offer, like the base game, easier paths for Souls newcomers: No, not really. At least not until you're already far along. This DLC is for people who beat Elden Ring, or all but beat it, and want capital-M More.

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Sicherheitslücke BundID: Verwaltungsdienste von 300 Kommunen wiederholt offline

Die BundID dient bei Webdiensten deutscher Verwaltungen als Vertrauensanker. Jüngste Ereignisse zeigen jedoch: Das Verfahren bietet Missbrauchspotenzial. (Sicherheitslücke, Datenschutz)

Die BundID dient bei Webdiensten deutscher Verwaltungen als Vertrauensanker. Jüngste Ereignisse zeigen jedoch: Das Verfahren bietet Missbrauchspotenzial. (Sicherheitslücke, Datenschutz)

Connect Conference: 1&1 Mobilfunk räumt Herausforderungen durch Open RAN ein

Der Chef von 1&1 Mobilfunk spricht offen über Schwierigkeit und Herausforderungen durch Open RAN. “Dennoch glauben wir wirklich, dass wir auf dem richtigen Weg sind”, erklärte Michael Martin. (Open RAN, Mobilfunk)

Der Chef von 1&1 Mobilfunk spricht offen über Schwierigkeit und Herausforderungen durch Open RAN. "Dennoch glauben wir wirklich, dass wir auf dem richtigen Weg sind", erklärte Michael Martin. (Open RAN, Mobilfunk)

How ShinyHunters hackers allegedly pilfered Ticketmaster data from Snowflake

Start with a third-party contractor and go from there.

Ticketmaster logo

Enlarge (credit: Ric Tapia via Getty)

Hackers who stole terabytes of data from Ticketmaster and other customers of the cloud storage firm Snowflake claim they obtained access to some of the Snowflake accounts by first breaching a Belarusian-founded contractor that works with those customers.

About 165 customer accounts were potentially affected in the recent hacking campaign targeting Snowflake’s customers, but only a few of these have been identified so far. In addition to Ticketmaster, the banking firm Santander has also acknowledged that their data was stolen but declined to identify the account from which it was stolen. Wired, however, has independently confirmed that it was a Snowflake account; the stolen data included bank account details for 30 million customers, including 6 million account numbers and balances, 28 million credit card numbers, and human resources information about staff, according to a post published by the hackers. Lending Tree and Advance Auto Parts have also said they might be victims as well.

Snowflake has not revealed details about how the hackers accessed the accounts, saying only that the intruders did not directly breach Snowflake’s network. This week, Google-owned security firm Mandiant, one of the companies engaged by Snowflake to investigate the breaches, revealed in a blog post that in some cases the hackers first obtained access through third-party contractors, without identifying the contractors or stating how this access aided the hackers in breaching the Snowflake accounts.

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