15 Billion Stolen Logins Are Circulating on the Dark Web

https://www.wired.com/story/dark-web-credentials-roger-stone-blueleaks


After China imposed a restrictive national security law on Hong Kong, tech companies find themselves at a crossroads. Giants like Google and Facebook stopped responding to requests for user data in the city, but may eventually have to pull out altogether.

One marquee name to exit Hong Kong already is TikTok, which remains eager to prove its distance from its China-based parent company. TikTok also found itself embroiled in a confusing episode on Friday, when an internal Amazon email indicated that the company was ordering employees to remove the app from their phones; hours later, Amazon stated that the email was sent in error. Hate it when the drafts go live, especially when they cause an international furor.

The world of Super Smash Bros. was also thrown into turmoil this week, as dozens of members of the community came forward with allegations of sexual misconduct. Elsewhere, Russian criminal gangs are getting into business email compromise—a fancy term for phishing scams—which can only end well. And hackers are actively exploiting a vulnerability in BIG-IP networking equipment, which will only end worse.

It wasn’t all bad news. Microsoft seized a bunch of domains tied to BEC activity. The robo-lawyer DoNotPay added a new service that not only unsubscribes you from marketing emails, but signs you up for any class action lawsuits against the company that was spamming you. We also walked through how to passcode-lock any app on your phone.

And there’s more! Every Saturday we round up the security and privacy stories that we didn’t break or report on in depth but think you should know about. Click on the headlines to read them, and stay safe out there.

It’s no secret that hacker forums on the dark web are teeming with stolen credentials. But a recent audit from security firm Digital Shadows has put a number on just how large a problem that’s become. The data loss detection firm found 15 billion login pairs—user names and passwords—stemming from 100,000 breaches. Five billion of those were unique. The survey also details pricing, which varies widely based on how recent the breach is and what type of site it accesses. Financial services and banking passwords, unsurprisingly, command a much higher sum than file sharing or video game accounts. As always, WIRED recommends using a password manager to minimize the fallout when a company coughs up your sign-in info.

Facebook regularly takes down Pages associated with what it calls coordinated inauthentic behavior from countries like Russia and Iran. This week, though, it turned its attention stateside, taking down dozens of Pages and accounts associated with Donald Trump associate Roger Stone violating the platform’s rules. Stone’s personal Facebook and Instagram account were included the enforcement effort, along with a bunch of fake ones that promoted Stone’s positions across a variety of topics.

Motherboard reports this week that a company called SpyCloud, which sells access to data obtained by criminals in breaches, has marketed its services to law enforcement agencies. The practice would enable police or other government organizations to do an end-around of due process, by potentially collecting data from a huge number of civilians, whether they’ve been accused of a crime or not, without a warrant.

Late last month, the group DDoSecrets hosted a massive trove of hacked law enforcement data that had been passed to it by someone claiming an affiliation with Anonymous. This week, German authorities seized the web server that hosted the so-called BlueLeaks collection, at the behest of the US government. DDoSecrets remains undeterred, but the site that had hosted BlueLeaks remains down as of press time.


More Great WIRED Stories

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July 11, 2020 at 08:06AM

Boom to unveil first independently-developed supersonic jet XB-1

https://geekologie.com/2020/07/boom-to-unveil-first-independently-devel.php

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Aircraft manufacturer Boom plans on unveiling their XB-1 prototype on October 7th, which would be the first independently-developed supersonic jet. According to Airline Ratings:

The fuselage is complete, the wings tested and installed and the engines are ready to fire up. In April, the manufacturing team installed XB-1’s wing to the forward fuselage in a quick and seamless operation. Boom says that it has made significant progress to the aft fuselage build-up which hosts the XB-1’s three supersonic engines. The XB-1’s titanium aft fuselage can withstand temperatures in excess of 800°F.

Drop tests for XB-1’s nose and main landing gears are also underway, while the pilots are training in the flight simulator.
The prototype is a proof of concept before production of a full scale 50-seat supersonic airliner, to be called the "Overture". The timeline for the planned entry into airline service has now also slipped from the previously envisaged 2023-24 to between 2025 and 2027.

The original Concorde was retired in 2003 and there haven’t been any commercial supsersonic flights since. But really, just how fast do we really need our air travel to be? I guess flying to Taiwan in half the time would be neat, but I’ve watched cartoons and in the future we’re all going to be zipping around in tubes anyway so I’m not sure there’s going to be a huge market for this. Keep going for some more production shots as well as the official Boom XB-1 video.
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via Geekologie – Gadgets, Gizmos, and Awesome https://geekologie.com/

July 10, 2020 at 02:20PM

The Highest Grossing Animated Movies of All Time [Visualization]

https://www.geeksaresexy.net/2020/07/11/the-highest-grossing-animated-movies-of-all-time-visualization/

This visualization is about highest grossing animated movies of all time. We have tried our best to visualize the top 10 highest grossing movies of all time (ANIMATED MOVIES). Animated family films have performed consistently well at the box office. The highest grossing movies on this list have all had a theatrical run. 2010 is the year with the most animated movies in the top 10. All films in The Rescuers, Finding Nemo, and Lion King franchises were the highest-grossing animated movies of the year they were released. At least eight animated films have held the record of highest-grossing animated film at different times. All of these movies are still among the highest-grossing animated movies (except some of them). In today’s world unlike in the past we have many animated movies releasing more frequently but not all of them make their way in the list of highest grossing movies.

[Data Broz]

The post The Highest Grossing Animated Movies of All Time [Visualization] appeared first on Geeks are Sexy Technology News.

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July 11, 2020 at 07:00AM

12-year-old girl awarded $20,000 for inventing device to prevent hot car deaths

https://geekologie.com/2020/07/12-year-old-girl-awarded-20000-for-inven.php

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12-year-old Lydia Denton was named the winner of CITGO’s Fueling Education Student Challenge and awarded $20,000 after inventing a device to prevent hot car deaths. People writes:

The device works through a pressure pad under the car seat cover, which can sense weight over 5 lbs. When a baby is in the seat, the system starts itself up and monitors the temperature.

If the temperature reaches above 102 degrees, the seat will set off an alarm along with a warning on the LCD display. A text will also be sent to the parent’s phone. If the parent does not reset the button within 60 seconds, a message is sent to 911 with the built-in GPS chip, called an Arduino, sending the car’s location to emergency services.

Wow this is inspiring. You know what I was doing when I was 12? It was less "inventing devices that would save lives" and more "getting my arm stuck in vending machines trying to steal snacks." Did my efforts help society? Maybe not, but they did result in 911 being called just like Lydia’s device so obviously we’re both equally great people. 12-year-old-invents-hot-car-2.jpg
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via Geekologie – Gadgets, Gizmos, and Awesome https://geekologie.com/

July 10, 2020 at 08:19AM

Sony is selling a personal wearable AC unit

https://geekologie.com/2020/07/httpsinterestingengineeringcomsony-launc.php

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Announced in 2019, Sony is now selling its Reon Pocket, a personal temperature control unit that sells for about $130 (14,080 Japanese Yen). According to Design Boom:

the reon pocket utilizes thermoelectric cooling but sony says you can also use it as a heater on winter days. it can supposedly cool a user’s body temperature by 13 degrees celsius (23 degrees fahrenheit) and raise your temperature by about 8 degrees celsius (about 14 degrees fahrenheit).

the reon pocket is a bluetooth device about the size of a card wallet that slips into a special undershirt with a pocket at the base of the neck. it connects to an app which gives users control of the temperature via their smartphone.
the wearable air conditioner supports ios and android, has a battery life of 90 minutes and a charge time of 2 hours. it looks a little like an apple mouse, weighs just 85 grams and uses USB-c.

It’s a similar concept as the Embr Wave, which is a wearable bracelet that also heats and cools, but sells for more than double the price at $299. I imagine the Reon Pocket is more effective since it sits at your neck/back versus your wrist, but the problem is you have to wear that stupid undershirt to make it work. Although I suppose you could skip the shirt and just tape it to your back like John McClane in Die Hard. Yippee ki-yay, you poor sweaty bastards. I’ve got a weird device taped to my back and that makes me cooler than you. Literally.
Keep going for the product video or check out the main Japanese site here.

via Geekologie – Gadgets, Gizmos, and Awesome https://geekologie.com/

July 9, 2020 at 10:00AM

Probe of failed Boeing Starliner launch finds a long list of problems

https://www.engadget.com/nasa-boeing-starliner-investigation-end-092953331.html

The independent team NASA and Boeing formed to look into Starliner’s failed flight to the ISS is done with its investigation. And based on NASA’s announcement, they have a pretty lengthy list of changes to make before the spacecraft can start ferrying astronauts to space. The joint review team ended their investigation with 80 recommendations for NASA and Boeing to address, with the most notable suggestion being the performance of end-to-end tests using the maximum amount of flight hardware before each flight.

One of the main reasons why the Starliner’s first flight failed was because Boeing divided its tests in small chunks instead of conducting a longer one that simulates the whole process from launch to docking. As a result, the aerospace company didn’t discover that the spacecraft’s onboard computer time was miscalibrated by 11 hours, preventing Starliner’s thrusters from firing and sending it to the correct orbit. In addition, Boeing didn’t test the Starliner’s software against its service module. The company used an emulator, which ended up being flawed, and didn’t discover a critical software defect that could’ve led to "loss of vehicle."

According to NASA Spaceflight, NASA Commercial Crew Program manager Steve Stich also determined that the agency wasn’t able to provide Boeing with sufficient oversight. That allowed multiple issues, particularly software problems, to remain unnoticed. While NASA didn’t list all 80 recommendations, it enumerated some of the more important ones, such as addressing any identified simulation or emulation gaps, increasing the involvement of subject matter experts in safety critical areas and making organizational changes to the safety reporting structure.

NASA and Boeing are hoping to redo Starliner’s uncrewed test flight to the ISS later this year. While the repeat flight doesn’t have an exact date yet, The Washington Post previously reported that they’re aiming for an October or a November launch.

via Engadget http://www.engadget.com

July 8, 2020 at 04:42AM

Google Maps is Starting to Show Traffic Lights on Android

https://www.droid-life.com/2020/07/07/google-maps-is-starting-to-show-traffic-lights-on-android/

Google Maps Traffic Lights-2

Read the original post: Google Maps is Starting to Show Traffic Lights on Android

With the launch of iOS 13 a year ago, Apple introduced a feature into Apple Maps that even Google Maps had yet to implement. Apple added traffic lights and stop signs, both of which would give drivers an extra bit of info as they navigate to their next location. Up until now, Google Maps has yet to add this feature, but one of our readers may have uncovered the first signs of it on the way.

As you will see throughout the images in this post, Google appears to be adding traffic lights to Maps and will show them both while navigating and while browsing around. The little traffic lights icon isn’t that easy to see just yet and Google doesn’t seem to be actively letting users know about lights, but the icons could be a start to more meaningful info.

Google Maps Traffic Lights

From what our reader has shared, the icons do grow in size a bit while navigating, but Google Maps isn’t yet including them in the list of instructions, highlighting their place along your route, etc. Apple Maps is doing that, and will shout them out through Siri should you come to a turn that’s at a light or stop sign.

You can probably imagine how handy it might be to know if your route is filled with either stop signs or traffic lights. If you are pressed for time, avoiding a string of lights could be beneficial.

Again, this looks like something that Google is slowly adding or testing, as I can’t find anyone else with traffic lights showing. They are showing to our reader through Google Maps build 10.44.3. I am not seeing them on Google Maps beta 10.45.0.

Google Maps Traffic Lights

Google Maps Traffic Lights

Anyone else seeing traffic lights in Google Maps?

Cheers Justin!

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July 7, 2020 at 05:22PM