Deutsche Raumfahrt: Rakete der Rocketfactory Augsburg explodiert auf Teststand

Unter großem Zeitdruck durch den Hauptanteilseigner OHB endet ein Triebwerkstest mit der Zerstörung der ersten Raketenstufe der RFA-One-Rakete. Von Frank Wunderlich-Pfeiffer (Raumfahrt, BBC)

Unter großem Zeitdruck durch den Hauptanteilseigner OHB endet ein Triebwerkstest mit der Zerstörung der ersten Raketenstufe der RFA-One-Rakete. Von Frank Wunderlich-Pfeiffer (Raumfahrt, BBC)

Anzeige: Zum CEH-zertifizierten Cybersecurity Expert in fünf Tagen

Certified Ethical Hacker übernehmen die Perspektive von Cyberkriminellen, um Sicherheitslücken aufzuspüren und zu beheben. Dieser fünftägige Intensivkurs dient der Vorbereitung auf die CEH-Zertifizierung – inklusive Prüfung. (Golem Karrierewelt, Server…

Certified Ethical Hacker übernehmen die Perspektive von Cyberkriminellen, um Sicherheitslücken aufzuspüren und zu beheben. Dieser fünftägige Intensivkurs dient der Vorbereitung auf die CEH-Zertifizierung - inklusive Prüfung. (Golem Karrierewelt, Server-Applikationen)

Amid summer COVID surge, FDA reportedly poised to approve updated shots

Wastewater SARS-CoV-2 levels suggest the summer surge is high and peaking right now.

Amid summer COVID surge, FDA reportedly poised to approve updated shots

Enlarge (credit: Getty | Thomas Trutschel)

With the country experiencing a relatively large summer wave of COVID-19, the Food and Drug Administration is considering signing off on this year's strain-matched COVID-19 vaccines as soon as this week, according to a report by CNN that cited unnamed officials familiar with the matter.

Last year, the FDA gave the green light for the 2023–2024 COVID shots on September 11, close to the peak of SARS-CoV-2 transmission in that year's summer wave. This year, the summer wave began earlier and, by some metrics, is peaking at much higher levels than in previous years.

Currently, wastewater detection of SARS-CoV-2 shows "very high" virus levels in 32 states and the District of Colombia. An additional 11 states are listed as having "high" levels. Looking at trends, the southern and western regions of the country are currently reporting SARS-CoV-2 levels in wastewater that rival the 2022–2023 and 2023–2024 winter waves, which both peaked at the very end of December.

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Windows 0-day was exploited by North Korea to install advanced rootkit

FudModule rootkit burrows deep into Windows, where it can bypass key security defenses.

Windows 0-day was exploited by North Korea to install advanced rootkit

Enlarge (credit: Getty Images)

A Windows zero-day vulnerability recently patched by Microsoft was exploited by hackers working on behalf of the North Korean government so they could install custom malware that’s exceptionally stealthy and advanced, researchers reported Monday.

The vulnerability, tracked as CVE-2024-38193, was one of six zero-days—meaning vulnerabilities known or actively exploited before the vendor has a patch—fixed in Microsoft’s monthly update release last Tuesday. Microsoft said the vulnerability—in a class known as a "use after free"—was located in AFD.sys, the binary file for what’s known as the ancillary function driver and the kernel entry point for the Winsock API. Microsoft warned that the zero-day could be exploited to give attackers system privileges, the maximum system rights available in Windows and a required status for executing untrusted code.

Lazarus gets access to the Windows kernel

Microsoft warned at the time that the vulnerability was being actively exploited but provided no details about who was behind the attacks or what their ultimate objective was. On Monday, researchers with Gen—the security firm that discovered the attacks and reported them privately to Microsoft—said the threat actors were part of Lazarus, the name researchers use to track a hacking outfit backed by the North Korean government.

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That book is poison: Even more Victorian covers found to contain toxic dyes

Old books with toxic dyes may be in universities, public libraries, private collections.

Composite image showing color variation of emerald green bookcloth on book spines, likely a result of air pollution

Enlarge / Composite image showing color variation of emerald green bookcloth on book spines, likely a result of air pollution (credit: Winterthur Library, Printed Book and Periodical Collection)

In April, the National Library of France removed four 19th century books, all published in Great Britain, from its shelves because the covers were likely laced with arsenic. The books have been placed in quarantine for further analysis to determine exactly how much arsenic is present. It's part of an ongoing global effort to test cloth-bound books from the 19th and early 20th centuries because of the common practice of using toxic dyes during that period.

Chemists from Lipscomb University in Nashville, Tennessee, have also been studying Victorian books from that university's library collection in order to identify and quantify levels of poisonous substances in the covers. They reported their initial findings this week at a meeting of the American Chemical Society in Denver. Using a combination of spectroscopic techniques, they found that several books had lead concentrations more than twice the limit imposed by the US Centers for Disease Control (CDC).

The Lipscomb effort was inspired by the University of Delaware's Poison Book Project, established in 2019 as an interdisciplinary crowdsourced collaboration between university scientists and the Winterthur Museum, Garden, and Library. The initial objective was to analyze all the Victorian-era books in the Winterthur circulating and rare books collection for the presence of an arsenic compound called cooper acetoarsenite, an emerald green pigment that was very popular at the time to dye wallpaper, clothing, and cloth book covers. Book covers dyed with chrome yellow—favored by Vincent van Gogh— aka lead chromate, were also examined, and the project's scope has since expanded worldwide.

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Lilbits: Apple’s first consumer robot, Qualcomm’s first smartphone chip with Oryon CPU cores, and MNT Pocket Reform (modular mini-laptop)

The MNT Pocket Reform is a modular, open source mini-laptop that went up for pre-order last year through a crowdfunding campaign and began shipping this summer. Thanks to its modular design, the system was always made with customization in mind: the br…

The MNT Pocket Reform is a modular, open source mini-laptop that went up for pre-order last year through a crowdfunding campaign and began shipping this summer. Thanks to its modular design, the system was always made with customization in mind: the brains of the system are on a removable system-on-a-module (SoM) with a processor, memory, […]

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