Le mot « Louvre » utilisé comme mot de passe par la surveillance du musée ?20 MinutesDes rapports confidentiels sur la sécurité du musée parisien avaient déjà tiré la sonnette d'alarme dans les années 2010


flanker (./37503) :Oui mais y a un champ magnétique assez puissant à mesure que tu t'approches du sommet.
Le monde est bien fait : la chaîne hiérarchique est de taille finie, généralement de longueur inférieure à 10
Zerosquare (./37500) :Ils pensaient pas qu'il y aurait quiconque qui l'ouvre (si j'ose dire) sur le sujetLe mot « Louvre » utilisé comme mot de passe par la surveillance du musée ?20 MinutesDes rapports confidentiels sur la sécurité du musée parisien avaient déjà tiré la sonnette d'alarme dans les années 2010

This company's plan to launch 4,000 massive space mirrors has scientists alarmed
Space.com
California-based start-up Reflect Orbital has applied for a government license to launch a giant mirror to space next year. The mission is meant to be the first step in the company's ambitious plan to operate a constellation of more than 4,000 solar reflectors to boost solar power production in twilight hours on Earth.
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Astronomers and biodiversity experts, however, are voicing concerns about the development, calling for an environmental review of the space mirrors' effects on life on Earth.
https://www.tomshardware.com/tech-industry/cyber-security/laid-off-intel-employee-allegedly-steals-top-secret-files-goes-on-the-run-ex-engineer-downloaded-18-000-files-before-disappearing
A former software engineer is facing a $250,000 lawsuit from Intel after he allegedly stole tens of thousands of files, including data labeled as “Intel Top Secret” According to The Mercury News, Jinfeng Luo, who started at Intel in 2014, received a termination notice last July 7th, ending his service with the company at the same month. Luo downloaded around 18,000 files in total, and then disappeared, with Intel now pressing a lawsuit in an effort to recover its property.
Intel is in the midst of a massive reduction-in-force, with 35,000 jobs cut in the last couple of years, so that may have contributed to Luo's termination, before evidence of any wrongdoing came to light. The company has been whittling down numbers as it faces a massive financial crisis, which was first laid bare in late July and early August 2024.
Luo, who cannot be located, hasn’t responded to any of the allegations yet. However, the company is demanding $250,000 in damages from the individual, as well as the return of all the stolen information.

The changes, proposed by the European Commission, the bloc’s executive branch, changes core elements of the GDPR, making it easier for companies to share anonymized and pseudonymized personal datasets. They would allow AI companies to legally use personal data to train AI models, so long as that training complies with other GDPR requirements.
The proposal also waters down a key part of Europe’s sweeping artificial intelligence rules, the AI Act, which came into force in 2024 but had many elements that would only come into effect later. The change extends the grace period for rules governing high-risk AI systems that pose “serious risks” to health, safety, or fundamental rights, which were due to come into effect next summer. The rules will now only apply once it’s confirmed that “the needed standards and support tools are available” to AI companies.
One change that’s likely to please almost everyone is a reduction in Europe’s ubiquitous cookie banners and pop-ups. Under the new proposal, some “non-risk” cookies won’t trigger pop-ups at all, and users would be able to control others from central browser controls that apply to websites broadly.
Other amendments in the new Digital Omnibus include simplified AI documentation requirements for smaller companies, a unified interface for companies to report cybersecurity incidents, and centralizing oversight of AI into the bloc’s AI Office.
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French cloud outfit OVHcloud took another hit this week after GrapheneOS, a mobile operating system, said it was ditching the company's servers over concerns about France's approach to digital privacy.
The project posted on X (formerly Twitter): "We no longer have any active servers in France and are continuing the process of leaving OVH."
"France isn't a safe country for open source privacy projects," the group explained. "They expect backdoors in encryption and for device access too. Secure devices and services are not going to be allowed.
"We don't feel safe using OVH for even a static website with servers in Canada/US via their Canada/US subsidiaries."
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According to another privacy-obsessed organization, Proton, "France's stance against privacy-first companies and open-source projects sends a broader message: operate here and give us access to your data, or leave."