Auteur Sujet: kfeq Russian Military Hackers Have Been on a Worldwide Password Guessing Spree  (Lu 20 fois)

MethrenRaf

  • Hero Member
  • *****
  • Messages: 161869
    • drwg The Quest TV Competition Turns Fantasy Into Reality Television
Twnj Apple and Google   s Coronavirus Efforts Remind Us How Little Control We Have Over Our Health Data
 According to Bloomberg, Apple has officially terminated Epic Gamess App St stanley cup ore developer account after promising to do so, which means the Fortnite makers games鈥攁nd more importantly, updates for existing games like Fortnite鈥攁re no more, at least on iOS.      We are disappointed that we have had to terminate the Epic Games account on the App Store,  Apple said in a statement to Bloomberg.  We have worked with the team at Epic Games for many years on their launches and releases. The court recommended that Epic comply with the App Store guidelines while their case moves forward, guidelines theyve followed for the past decade until they created this situation. Epic has refused.  Epic Games founder and CEO Tim Sweeney shot back on Twitter:  Apple 39  statement isn 39;t forthright. They chose to terminate Epic 39  account; they didn 39;t *have* to. Apple suggests we spammed the Ap stanley mugg p Store review pr stanley tazas ocess. That 39  not so. Epic submitted three Fortnite builds: two bug-fix updates, and the Season 4 update with this note. pic.twitter/VpWEERDp5L mdash; Tim Sweeney  @TimSweeneyEpic  August 28, 2020  This is the latest move in the battle between Epic and Apple, which started when the gaming company decided to take a stand against Apples revenue-share program, which requires every app that charges a premium  either up-front or via in-app purchases  to pay Apple a cut. Epic added an option to Fortnite that allowed players to buy V-Bucks, the games currency, directly from Epic rather  Kcdy Scientists Release Result from    Astonishing    Feat of Creating and Testing Quantum Gas in Space
 detailing extensive social stanley cup  media surveillance in Boston between 2014 and 2016. Thousands of documents obtained through public records requests reveal that police used advanced social media data mining techniques to monitor what they termed  Islamist Extremist Terminology.  The authorities worked with Geofeedia, a social media monitoring startup that both Facebook and Twitter banned from using their data in December 2016, prompting the ACLUs original records request. Using Geofeedia, police are able to filter social media posts based on images, keywords, hashtags, and, crucially, location data鈥攁ll in real time. The Boston Police Department and its intelligence gathering arm, the Boston Regional Intelligence Center, sourced posts from Facebook, Instagram, YouTube, Flickr and Twitter. In Chicago, police tracked people using the  BlackLivesMatter hashtag during protests, Similarly, Boston authorities tracked people tweeting  MuslimLivesMatter online. This surveillance dragnet caught up everyone using the targeted tags, including emoji, in the area, even if they opted not to disclose their location to Twitter itself.     As documents show, the Boston Regional Intelligence Center created an alert category called  Islamist Extremist Terminology  and set up alerts around terror-related keywords, like  ISIS  and  Islamic state,  and words that may be connected to an attack, includi stanley ca ng  smoke,  boom,  and  backpack.  BRIC m stanley mugs embers received an email with a link to any tweet, Facebook post