The Curiosity Rover is driving in reverse to protect its dented wheels

Curiosity’s aluminum wheels have taken a beating since starting its Martian mission back in August 2012. Now, in an effort to preserve them, NASA instructed the rover to drive nearly 330 feet (100 meters) in reverse — it’s longest advance in three months. Read more…        

Taken from:
The Curiosity Rover is driving in reverse to protect its dented wheels

A Tinder security flaw has been exposing users’ exact locations for several months.

A Tinder security flaw has been exposing users’ exact locations for several months . Fixed now, though! Read more…        

Read More:
A Tinder security flaw has been exposing users’ exact locations for several months.

Google Wants to Bring Fiber to 34 More US Cities

It’s finally time! Google just announced that it’s “exploring” the idea of bringing Fiber to nine more metropolitan areas across the country—34 cities in total. And based on the map Google made to show what the expansion would look like, you’re in luck if you live in the South. Read more…        

Taken from:
Google Wants to Bring Fiber to 34 More US Cities

Iran’s Hacking of US Navy ‘Extensive,’ Repairs Took $10M and 4 Months

cold fjord sends news that Iran’s breach of a computer network belonging to the U.S. Navy was more serious than originally thought. According to a Wall Street Journal report (paywalled, but summarized at The Verge), it took the Navy four months to secure its network after the breach, and the repair cost was approximately $10 million. From the article: “The hackers targeted the Navy Marine Corps Intranet, the unclassified network used by the Department of the Navy to host websites, store nonsensitive information and handle voice, video and data communications. The network has 800, 000 users at 2, 500 locations, according to the Navy. … The intrusion into the Navy’s system was the most recent in a series of Iranian cyberoffensives that have taken U.S. military and intelligence officials by surprise. In early 2012, top intelligence officials held the view that Iran wanted to execute a cyberattack but had little capability. Not long after, Iranian hackers began a series of major “denial-of-service” attacks on a growing number of U.S. bank websites, and they launched a virus on a Saudi oil company that immobilized 30, 000 computers. … Defense officials were surprised at the skills of the Iranian hackers. Previously, their tactics had been far cruder, usually involving so-called denial of service attacks that disrupt network operations but usually don’t involve a penetration of network security.” Read more of this story at Slashdot.

View article:
Iran’s Hacking of US Navy ‘Extensive,’ Repairs Took $10M and 4 Months

Your Next Scuba Destination Is An Entire Drowned City in China

An entire drowned city has become the world’s most mind-boggling scuba-diving attraction. Consider booking a trip to Qiandao Lake, China, where you can wreck-dive a 1, 800-year old flooded metropolis. Read more…        

Read More:
Your Next Scuba Destination Is An Entire Drowned City in China

200-400 Gbps DDoS Attacks Are Now Normal

An anonymous reader writes “Brian Krebs has a followup to this week’s 400 Gbps DDoS attack using NTP amplification. Krebs, as a computer security writer, has often been the target of DDoS attacks. He was also hit by a 200Gbps attack this week (apparently, from a 15-year-old in Illinois). That kind of volume would have been record-breaking only a couple of years ago, but now it’s just normal. Arbor Networks says we’ve entered the ‘hockey stick’ era of DDoS attacks, as a graph of attack volume spikes sharply over the past year. CloudFlare’s CEO wrote, ‘Monday’s DDoS proved these attacks aren’t just theoretical. To generate approximately 400Gbps of traffic, the attacker used 4, 529 NTP servers running on 1, 298 different networks. On average, each of these servers sent 87Mbps of traffic to the intended victim on CloudFlare’s network. Remarkably, it is possible that the attacker used only a single server running on a network that allowed source IP address spoofing to initiate the requests. An attacker with a 1 Gbps connection can theoretically generate more than 200Gbps of DDoS traffic.’ In a statement to Krebs, he added, ‘We have an attack of over 100 Gbps almost every hour of every day.'” Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Visit site:
200-400 Gbps DDoS Attacks Are Now Normal

Learn how Hollywood screwed over the VFX industry in Life After Pi

In 2011-12, the VFX company Rhythm & Hues created the astounding effects for Ang Lee’s gorgeous movie The Life of Pi . Then they went bankrupt, fired their staff, and went out of business. Two weeks later they won an Oscar. The new documentary Life After Pi shows how this insanity was made possible. Read more…        

More:
Learn how Hollywood screwed over the VFX industry in Life After Pi

First Concept Art of the Millennium Falcon in Star Wars: Episode VII?

We still know almost nothing about the first live-action Star Wars movie in a decade, but now we may have gotten a glimpse at one of the movie’s big special-effects sequences. A redesigned Lucasfilm website includes a photo of a production meeting, where you can glimpse some concept art. Read more…        

Read More:
First Concept Art of the Millennium Falcon in Star Wars: Episode VII?

This Crazy-Advanced Malware Has Been Infecting Governments Since 2007

Kaspersky security researchers just revealed their discovery of a cyberespionage threat they say could be the most advanced in the world. Immensely powerful and hard to detect, it’s been active since at least 2007, targeting governments, embassies, and energy companies. And nobody knows where it came from. Read more…        

Read more here:
This Crazy-Advanced Malware Has Been Infecting Governments Since 2007