(g+) Object Storage: S3 in der Hetzner-Beta
Wir haben uns die Beta der Object Storage in der Hetzner Cloud angeschaut. Der Anbieter setzt für den Dienst auf eine S3-kompatible Lösung. Von Dominik Robert (Cloud, Storage)
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Wir haben uns die Beta der Object Storage in der Hetzner Cloud angeschaut. Der Anbieter setzt für den Dienst auf eine S3-kompatible Lösung. Von Dominik Robert (Cloud, Storage)
Der wilde Roboter ist ein emotional packender, visuell und akustisch mitreißender Science-Fiction-Film für die ganze Familie. Eine Rezension von Peter Osteried (Science-Fiction, Film)
Das Bestehen der Prüfungen LPI 101 und LPI 102 ist Voraussetzung für das LPIC-1 Zertifikat. Das fünftägige Onlineseminar der Golem Karrierewelt bereitet darauf vor. Mit optionalem Prüfungsvoucher. (Golem Karrierewelt, Server-Applikationen)
Subscribers tolerated the current ad load, so Amazon is adding more commercials.
Subscribers to Prime Video's ad tier will start seeing more commercials next year, further testing how much advertising streamers will tolerate.
Speaking to the Financial Times today, Kelly Day, VP of Prime Video International, said that Amazon will offer more Prime Video ad slots to advertisers next year. She didn't get into specifics but confirmed that Prime Video's ad load would "ramp up a little bit more into 2025."
In January, when Amazon launched Prime Video's ad tier, The Wall Street Journal reported that subscribers would see an average of between two and three-and-a-half minutes of ads per hour. Day told FT today that upon launch, Prime Video with ads was given a "very light ad load," providing subscribers with a “gentle entry into advertising that has exceeded customers' expectations in terms of what the ad experience would be like." The executive pointed out that Prime Video with ads doesn't show commercials in the middle of content. That could change next year.
Subscribers tolerated the current ad load, so Amazon is adding more commercials.
Subscribers to Prime Video's ad tier will start seeing more commercials next year, further testing how much advertising streamers will tolerate.
Speaking to the Financial Times today, Kelly Day, VP of Prime Video International, said that Amazon will offer more Prime Video ad slots to advertisers next year. She didn't get into specifics but confirmed that Prime Video's ad load would "ramp up a little bit more into 2025."
In January, when Amazon launched Prime Video's ad tier, The Wall Street Journal reported that subscribers would see an average of between two and three-and-a-half minutes of ads per hour. Day told FT today that upon launch, Prime Video with ads was given a "very light ad load," providing subscribers “gentle entry into advertising that has exceeded customers expectations in terms of what the ad experience would be like." The executive pointed out that Prime Video with ads doesn't show commercials in the middle of content. That could change next year.
When successful, attacks install a backdoor. Getting it to work reliably is another matter.
Attackers are actively exploiting a critical vulnerability in mail servers sold by Zimbra in an attempt to remotely execute malicious commands that install a backdoor, researchers warn.
The vulnerability, tracked as CVE-2024-45519, resides in the Zimbra email and collaboration server used by medium and large organizations. When an admin manually changes default settings to enable the postjournal service, attackers can execute commands by sending maliciously formed emails to an address hosted on the server. Zimbra recently patched the vulnerability. All Zimbra users should install it or, at a minimum, ensure that postjournal is disabled.
On Tuesday, Security researcher Ivan Kwiatkowski first reported the in-the-wild attacks, which he described as “mass exploitation.” He said the malicious emails were sent by the IP address 79.124.49[.]86 and, when successful, attempted to run a file hosted there using the tool known as curl. Researchers from security firm Proofpoint took to social media later that day to confirm the report.
When successful, attacks install a backdoor. Getting it to work reliably is another matter.
Attackers are actively exploiting a critical vulnerability in mail servers sold by Zimbra in an attempt to remotely execute malicious commands that install a backdoor, researchers warn.
The vulnerability, tracked as CVE-2024-45519, resides in the Zimbra email and collaboration server used by medium and large organizations. When an admin manually changes default settings to enable the postjournal service, attackers can execute commands by sending maliciously formed emails to an address hosted on the server. Zimbra recently patched the vulnerability. All Zimbra users should install it or, at a minimum, ensure that postjournal is disabled.
On Tuesday, Security researcher Ivan Kwiatkowski first reported the in-the-wild attacks, which he described as “mass exploitation.” He said the malicious emails were sent by the IP address 79.124.49[.]86 and, when successful, attempted to run a file hosted there using the tool known as curl. Researchers from security firm Proofpoint took to social media later that day to confirm the report.
The PineNote is a tablet with a Rockchip RK3566 processor, 4GB of RAM, 128GB of storage, and a 10.3 inch, 1404 x 1872 pixel E Ink display with support for pressure-sensitive EMR pen input. First introduced in 2021, the tablet began shipping to early ad…
The PineNote is a tablet with a Rockchip RK3566 processor, 4GB of RAM, 128GB of storage, and a 10.3 inch, 1404 x 1872 pixel E Ink display with support for pressure-sensitive EMR pen input. First introduced in 2021, the tablet began shipping to early adopters in early 2022. But it’s been unavailable for purchase for a […]
The post Lilbits: PineNote, Office 2024, Snapdragon X2 Elite, and a fanless Intel N100 mini PC made for networking appeared first on Liliputing.
Linking Meta smart glasses to a face search engine can ID strangers in a glance.
Two Harvard students recently revealed that it's possible to combine Meta smart glasses with face image search technology to "reveal anyone's personal details," including their name, address, and phone number, "just from looking at them."
In a Google document, AnhPhu Nguyen and Caine Ardayfio explained how they linked a pair of Meta Ray Bans 2 to an invasive face search engine called PimEyes to help identify strangers by cross-searching their information on various people-search databases. They then used a large language model (LLM) to rapidly combine all that data, making it possible to dox someone in a glance or surface information to scam someone in seconds—or other nefarious uses, such as "some dude could just find some girl’s home address on the train and just follow them home,” Nguyen told 404 Media.
This is all possible thanks to recent progress with LLMs, the students said.
Linking Meta smart glasses to a face search engine can ID strangers in a glance.
Two Harvard students recently revealed that it's possible to combine Meta smart glasses with face image search technology to "reveal anyone's personal details," including their name, address, and phone number, "just from looking at them."
In a Google document, AnhPhu Nguyen and Caine Ardayfio explained how they linked a pair of Meta Ray Bans 2 to an invasive face search engine called PimEyes to help identify strangers by cross-searching their information on various people-search databases. They then used a large language model (LLM) to rapidly combine all that data, making it possible to dox someone in a glance or surface information to scam someone in seconds—or other nefarious uses, such as "some dude could just find some girl’s home address on the train and just follow them home,” Nguyen told 404 Media.
This is all possible thanks to recent progress with LLMs, the students said.