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JeaoneKef

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Qzof McCain: I Stand in Obama s Way Every Day
 The U.S. Department of State on Thursday said it would pay up to $10 million for information on the identities or whereabouts of leaders of the Hive ransomware gang.The agency alsosaidit is offering a reward of up to $5 million for info leading to the arrest or conviction of any person in any country conspiring to take part in Hive ransomware activity. Beginning in late July 2022, the FBI penetrated Hive s computer networks, obtained its decryption keys and offered them to victims worldwide, preventing victims from having to pay up to $130 million in ransoms demanded,  the State Department said in a statement.                                        Since 2021, Hive and its affiliates have targeted more than 1,500 institutions in over 80 countries, including the U.S., leading to theft of more than $100 million. Victims include school districts, financial firms and critical infrastructure.The federal government s lu stanley uk crative reward for information comes two weeks after U.S. Attorney General Merrick Garland announced that the FBI had toppled the international ring, seizing its servers in California after more than a year of spying on the cybercriminals.                                                                                    stanley bottles                      Ransomware attack on health care chain impacts hospitals across U.S.          02:04                                                                      Ransomware groups like Hive desig stanley drinking cup n malicious software to infiltrate computer  Dtai Politics Today: Finding the Votes for Health Care
  AP / CBS When the U.S. Department of stanley cup  Homeland Security announced last summer that it could seize anyone s laptop, mobile phone, or camera at the border to analyze them for an indefinite period, the criticism was immediate. Sen. Russ Feingold, a Democrat, called the move  alarming,  and the ACLU denounced it as  surrendering your Fourth Amendment rights at the border. It didn t help that the U.S. Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals already had blessed the practice -- meaning that anyone, even U.S. citizens, can have their tangle of gadgetry se stanley thermos mug ized at borders or at international arrivals even if there s zero evidence of illicit activities.  It won t happen to everyone in practice, of course, but DHS nevertheless reserved the right to do it. On Thursday, Homeland Securit stanley cup y Secretary Janet Napolitano announced new guidelines for searching and seizing electronic devices at the border. In a press release, DHS claimed that they would  enhance and clarify oversight for searches of computers and other electronic media at U.S. ports of entry. Rhetoric aside, in reality, not much has changed. Laptops and electronic gear can still be seized and held indefinitely; there s no requirement that they be returned to their owners after even six months or a year has passed, though supervisory approval is required if they re held for more than 15 days. The complete contents of a hard drive or memory card can be perused at length for evidence of lawbreaking of any kind, even if it s underpaying your ta