melbou (./37412) :Encore étudiant ?
Bon allez c'est fait, j'ai pris 1 an de Unlimited, c'était 5€/mois avec la réduc étudiant
melbou (./37414) :Ah mince
L'upload des photos du téléphone a créé un avertissement de surchauffe tellement la compression+cryptage prenaient du cpu.
melbou (./37414) :Y a pas photo
Le parrainage m'aurait filé un mois gratuit, c'est beaucoup moins rentable que les 5€ pendant 1 an
Global hack on Microsoft product hits U.S., state agencies, researchers say
MSN.com
Hackers exploited a major security flaw in widely used Microsoft server software to launch a global attack on government agencies and businesses in the past few days, breaching U.S. federal and state agencies, universities, energy companies and an Asian telecommunications company, according to state officials and private researchers.
The U.S. government and partners in Canada and Australia are investigating the compromise of SharePoint servers, which provide a platform for sharing and managing documents. Tens of thousands of such servers are at risk, experts said, and Microsoft has issued no patch for the flaw, leaving victims around the world scrambling to respond.
The “zero-day” attack, so called because it targeted a previously unknown vulnerability, is only the latest cybersecurity embarrassment for Microsoft. Last year, the company was faulted by a panel of U.S. government and industry experts for lapses that enabled a 2023 targeted Chinese hack of U.S. government emails, including those of then-Commerce Secretary Gina Raimondo.