call_end

    • chevron_right

      Open source project curl is sick of users submitting “AI slop” vulnerabilities

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica • 7 May

    "A threshold has been reached. We are effectively being DDoSed. If we could, we would charge them for this waste of our time," wrote Daniel Stenberg, original author and lead of the curl project , on LinkedIn this week .

    Curl (cURL in some realms), which turned 25 years old in 2023 , is an essential command-line tool and library for interacting with Internet resources. The open source project receives bug reports and security issues through many channels, including HackerOne, a reporting service that helps companies manage vulnerability reporting and bug bounties. HackerOne has fervently taken to AI tools in recent years. "One platform, dual force: Human minds + AI power," the firm's home page reads .

    Stenberg, saying that he's "had it" and is "putting my foot down on this craziness," suggested that every suspected AI-generated HackerOne report will have its reporter asked to verify if they used AI to find the problem or generate the submission. If a report is deemed "AI slop," the reporter will be banned. "We still have not seen a single valid security report done with AI help," Stenberg wrote.

    Read full article

    Comments

    • chevron_right

      Trump tariffs could make Americans pay $123B more annually for 10 common gadgets

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica • 7 May

    China has finally agreed to open negotiations with the Trump administration as the tech industry warns that tariffs could soon spike Americans' costs for the 10 most popular consumer technology products by more than $123 billion annually.

    On Wednesday, the Chinese Embassy in the US announced on X (formerly Twitter) that "China’s lead on China-US economic and trade affairs," He Lifeng, will meet with US Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent from May 9 to 12 to open talks. For those talks to go smoothly, China's Ministry of Commerce told reporters Wednesday , the US must "demonstrate sincerity" and come ready to "correct its wrongdoings," including facing "the severe negative impacts of its unilateral tariff measures on itself and the world."

    Previously, China had demanded that President Trump drop all tariffs to begin negotiations, which Trump refused while seemingly holding out on making a deal on TikTok to keep the potential bargaining chip.

    Read full article

    Comments

    • chevron_right

      The Third Crisis dawns in Foundation S3 teaser

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica • 7 May

    We have our first teaser for the upcoming third season of Foundation .

    It's been nearly two years, but the third season of Foundation, Apple TV+'s epic adaptation (or remix) of the Isaac Asimov series, is almost here. The streaming platform released an action-packed teaser of what we can expect from the new ten-episode season: the onset of the Third Crisis, a galactic war, and a shirtless Lee Pace.

    (Some spoilers for first two seasons below.)

    Showrunner David S. Goyer took great pains in S1 to carefully set up his expansive fictional world, and the scope only broadened in the second season. As previously reported , Asimov's fundamental narrative arc remains intact, with the series taking place across multiple planets over 1,000 years and featuring a huge cast of characters.

    Read full article

    Comments

    • chevron_right

      NASA scrambles to cut ISS activity after Trump budget—its options are not great

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica • 7 May

    One major surprise in the Trump administration's "skinny budget" proposal for NASA, released last Friday, was a demand that the US space agency reduce its activities on the International Space Station.

    "The Budget reduces the space station’s crew size and onboard research, preparing for a safe decommissioning of the station by 2030 and replacement by commercial space stations," stated the budget request for fiscal year 2026 . "Crew and cargo flights to the station would be significantly reduced. The station’s reduced research capacity would be focused on efforts critical to the Moon and Mars exploration programs."

    The budget proposal estimates this would save $508 million from a budget of about $3 billion annually to support the International Space Station.

    Read full article

    Comments

    • chevron_right

      Ford raises prices on Mexican-made cars—but not the full tariff cost

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica • 7 May

    Price rises are coming to some Mexican-made Ford vehicles this summer as a result of President Trump's decision to launch an international trade war. According to Reuters , which saw a memo that Ford sent to dealers, the price increase will affect the Mustang Mach-E electric crossover, the Bronco Sport crossover, and the Maverick pickup truck, which cost as much as an extra $2,000.

    The Trump auto tariffs went into effect at the beginning of April, adding a 25 percent charge to any imported vehicle. When challenged on the fact that this would cause significant price rises for US consumers, Trump told NBC that he "couldn't care less if they raise prices." And now that's happening.

    Ford told Ars that the price increases are part of its "usual mid-year pricing actions combined with tariffs we are facing" and that the price bumps do not cover the full costs of the tariff. Additionally, the move only affects vehicles that have been imported since May 2, which should only appear in dealerships in late June—any cars already in inventory are not subject to the price rise.

    Read full article

    Comments

    • chevron_right

      Dangerous clear-air turbulence is worsening due to global warming

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica • 7 May

    VIENNA—Scientists at the European Geosciences Union conference last week said there is growing scientific evidence that global warming is driving a big increase in dangerous clear-air turbulence, which is invisible from the cockpit and can surprise pilots and damage aircraft.

    Along some busy flight routes, turbulence is projected to “double or treble or quadruple over the next few decades,” said Paul Williams , a professor of atmospheric science and head of the weather research division at the University of Reading in the United Kingdom. “What we find … is that the jet stream regions in both the Northern and the Southern hemispheres are affected.”

    As its name implies, clear-air turbulence can happen when there are no visible signs of a weather disturbance, often at or near the boundary of contrasting air masses, moving in different directions and at varying speeds. It can unexpectedly toss large airplanes up and down by several hundred feet, potentially damaging the airframe and injuring passengers and crew.

    Read full article

    Comments

    • chevron_right

      Jury orders NSO to pay $167 million for hacking WhatsApp users

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica • 7 May

    A jury has awarded WhatsApp $167 million in punitive damages in a case the company brought against Israel-based NSO Group for exploiting a software vulnerability that hijacked the phones of thousands of users.

    The verdict, reached Tuesday, comes as a major victory not just for Meta-owned WhatsApp but also for privacy- and security-rights advocates who have long criticized the practices of NSO and other exploit sellers. The jury also awarded WhatsApp $444 million in compensatory damages.

    Clickless exploit

    WhatsApp sued NSO in 2019 for an attack that targeted roughly 1,400 mobile phones belonging to attorneys, journalists, human-rights activists, political dissidents, diplomats, and senior foreign government officials. NSO, which works on behalf of governments and law enforcement authorities in various countries, exploited a critical WhatsApp vulnerability that allowed it to install NSO’s proprietary spyware Pegasus on iOS and Android devices. The clickless exploit worked by placing a call to a target's app. A target did not have to answer the call to be infected.

    Read full article

    Comments

    • chevron_right

      The company with the world’s largest aircraft now has a hypersonic rocket plane

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica • 6 May

    Stratolaunch has finally found a use for the world's largest airplane.

    Twice in the last five months, the company launched a hypersonic vehicle over the Pacific Ocean, accelerated it to more than five times the speed of sound, and autonomously landed at Vandenberg Space Force Base in California. Stratolaunch used the same vehicle for both flights.

    This is the first time anyone in the United States has flown a reusable hypersonic rocket plane since the last flight of the X-15, the iconic rocket-powered aircraft that pushed the envelope of high-altitude, high-speed flight 60 years ago.

    Read full article

    Comments

    • chevron_right

      Trump and DOJ try to spring former county clerk Tina Peters from prison

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica • 6 May

    President Donald Trump is demanding the release of Tina Peters, a former election official who parroted Trump's 2020 election conspiracy theories and is serving nine years in prison for compromising the security of election equipment.

    In a post on Truth Social last night, Trump wrote that "Radical Left Colorado Attorney General Phil Weiser ignores Illegals committing Violent Crimes like Rape and Murder in his State and, instead, jailed Tina Peters, a 69-year-old Gold Star mother who worked to expose and document Democrat Election Fraud. Tina is an innocent Political Prisoner being horribly and unjustly punished in the form of Cruel and Unusual Punishment."

    Trump said he is "directing the Department of Justice to take all necessary action to help secure the release of this 'hostage' being held in a Colorado prison by the Democrats, for political reasons."

    Read full article

    Comments