Thursday, December 21, 2023

From Jenna Orkin New coronavirus variant JN.1 is spreading fast. Here’s what to know. Exploitive, illegal photos of children found in the data that trains some AI Failure at the Fence: How Hamas breached Israel’s security barrier on Oct. 7 Deep in the Sonoran Desert, high on a mountain’s wind-swept peak, there lives a tree known as Bigelow 224. With its stout orange trunk and long, graceful needles, the tree looks like any other ponderosa pine growing on Mount Bigelow. But a sliver of its wood, taken amid Earth’s warmest year on record, shows that this tree has a story to tell — and a warning to offer. Since Rhysida surfaced, in May, its victims have included the Chilean Army, a medical-research lab in Australia, and Prospect Medical Holdings, a health-care company with hospitals in Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, Connecticut, and California. There are reports that its code contains fragments of Russian, and it appears not to have struck inside Russia or its close allies. When I checked the Rhysida Web site last week, there were data for sale from Grupo José Alves, a Brazilian conglomerate; Insomniac Games, the maker of the Spider-Man 2 video game; HSE, a Slovenian energy company; and the Qatar Racing and Equestrian Club. Danny Danon, the former Israeli Ambassador to the United Nations, believes there’s no path forward for a Palestinian state. Life with Long Covid - NYT There were two shoot-and-move ranges, both backstopped by man-made berms. One featured a façade where assaulters could practice storming a building; another allowed trainees to fire at a junked car, to see which ammunition best penetrated automotive steel. An area was designated for “explosive training,” and Banyai told people that he planned to add a sniper course, a helipad, and a “maritime” element, in case anyone needed experience blitzing a ship. An epidemic of sexual abuse in schools 'So much gratitude': Americans freed by Venezuela in US prisoner swap land in Texas

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