• Risks Digest 34.77

    From risko@risko@csl.sri.com (RISKS List Owner) to risko on Sun Oct 12 00:56:28 2025
    From Newsgroup: comp.risks

    RISKS-LIST: Risks-Forum Digest Saturday 11 October 2025 Volume 34 : Issue 77

    ACM FORUM ON RISKS TO THE PUBLIC IN COMPUTERS AND RELATED SYSTEMS (comp.risks) Peter G. Neumann, founder and still moderator

    ***** See last item for further information, disclaimers, caveats, etc. ***** This issue is archived at <http://www.risks.org> as
    <http://catless.ncl.ac.uk/Risks/34.77>
    The current issue can also be found at
    <http://www.csl.sri.com/users/risko/risks.txt>

    Contents: [Long gap. Working backwards. I'm still human. PGN]
    How the World's Biggest Car-Makers Fell Behind in Software (FT)
    Why Are Car Software Updates Still So Bad? (WiReD via Gabe Goldberg)
    A delivery robot collided with a disabled man on L.A. street.
    The aftermath is getting ugly (LA Times via Steve Bacher)
    Scientists grow mini human brains to power computers (BBC)
    Apple Announces $2 Million Bug Bounty Reward for the Most Dangerous Exploits
    (WiReD)
    Every question you ask, every comment you make, will be recording you
    (The Register)
    EU to Expand Satellite Defenses After GPS Jamming of EC President's Flight
    (Franklin Okeke)
    NIST Enhances Security Controls for Improved Patching (Arielle Waldman)
    When AI Came for Hollywood (The NY Times)
    Small numbers of poisoned samples can wreck LLM AI models of any size
    (Cornell Study)
    Taco Bell Rethinks Future of Voice AI at Drive-Through (Isabelle Bousquette)
    AI Tool Identifies 1,000 'Questionable' Scientific Journals (Daniel Strain) Stanford Study: AI is destroying job prospects for younger workers
    especially in computing (Digital Economy)
    The dangers of AI coding (Lauren Weinstein)
    AI safety tool flags student activity, spurs debate on privacy and accuracy
    (san.com)
    The AI Prompt That Could End the World (The NY Times)
    Recruiters Use AI to Scan Resumes; Applicants Are Trick It (The NYT Times) Tristan Harris on The Dangers of Unregulated AI on Humanity and the
    Workforce (The Daily Show YouTube)
    The popular conception was that AI would be a danger to civilization because
    AI would be so smart, but the reality turns out to be the danger is that AI
    is so stupid. (Lauren Weinstein)
    AI Data Centers Are an Even Bigger Disaster Than Previously Thought
    (Futurism)
    Microsoft's agent mode is a tool for generating fake data (Pivot to AI)
    Cheer Up, or Else. China Cracks Down on the Haters and Cynics (NYT)
    Criminals offer reporter money to hack BBC (BBC)
    Tech billionaires seem to be doom prepping. Should we all be worried? (BBC) Japan faces Asahi beer shortage after cyber-attack (BBC)
    New WireTap Attack Extracts Intel SGX ECDSA Key via DDR4 Memory-Bus
    Interposer (The Hacker News)
    Exploit Allows for Takeover of Fleets of Unitree Robots (Evan Ackerman)
    Google Says 90% of Tech Workers Are Now Using AI at Work (Lisa Eadicicco)
    Neon buys phone calls to train AI, then leaks them all (Martin Ward)
    Government ID data used for age verification stolen (This week in Security) Federal cyber agency warns of 'serious and urgent' attack on tech used by
    remote workers (CBC)
    Billions of Dollars rCyVanishedrCO: Low-Profile Bankruptcy Rings Alarms on Wall
    Street (The New York Times)
    911 Service Is Restored in Louisiana and Mississippi
    How an Internet mapping glitch turned a random Kansas farm into a digital
    hell (Fusion)
    Microsoft cuts off cloud services to Israeli military unit (NBC)
    ShareFile website (Martin Ward)
    Abridged info on RISKS (comp.risks)

    ----------------------------------------------------------------------

    Date: Wed, 3 Sep 2025 11:30:54 -0400 (EDT)
    From: ACM TechNews <technews-editor@acm.org>
    Subject: How the World's Biggest Car-Makers Fell Behind in Software (FT)

    Kana Inagaki, Harry Dempsey and David Keohane, Financial Times (08/28/25),
    via ACM TechNews

    Legacy automakers are struggling to keep pace with Tesla and Chinese
    electric vehicle makers in the race to build software-defined vehicles.
    Despite hiring tech talent and investing billions, companies like Toyota, Volkswagen, and Volvo face buggy platforms, delays, and rising costs.
    Carmakers are partnering with tech giants like Google, Nvidia, and Rivian,
    but tensions remain over control of data and systems.

    ------------------------------

    Date: Sun, 5 Oct 2025 14:17:02 -0400
    From: Gabe Goldberg <gabe@gabegold.com>
    Subject: Why Are Car Software Updates Still So Bad? (WiReD)

    Over-the-air upgrades can not only transform your ride, they can help car=makers slash costs. Here's why theyrCOre still miles away from being seamless.

    https://www.wired.com/story/why-are-car-software-updates-still-so-bad/

    Omits two critical issues: security of updates, preventing malware. And bricking cars -- though "bricking" is in a section heading, but only meaning reducing function rather than -- you know, making a car useless.

    I badgered auto execs about these issues and got nothing but "it'll be wonderful".

    ------------------------------

    Date: Fri, 26 Sep 2025 07:15:09 -0700
    From: Steve Bacher <sebmb1@verizon.net>
    Subject: A delivery robot collided with a disabled man on L.A. street.
    The aftermath is getting ugly (LA Times)

    A collision in West Hollywood between a delivery robot and a man using a mobility scooter went viral, generating attacks on the robot company and
    on the man himself.

    https://www.latimes.com/california/story/2025-09-25/viral-video-of-delivery-robot-colliding-with-man-in-wheelchair-sparks-accessibility-debate

    ------------------------------

    Date: Sat, 4 Oct 2025 17:30:25 -0600
    From: Matthew Kruk <mkrukg@gmail.com>
    Subject: Scientists grow mini human brains to power computers (BBC)

    https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/cy7p1lzvxjro

    It may have its roots in science fiction, but a small number of researchers
    are making real progress trying to create computers out of living cells.

    Welcome to the weird world of biocomputing.

    Among those leading the way are a group of scientists in Switzerland, who I went to meet.

    One day, they hope we could see data centres full of "living" servers which replicate aspects of how artificial intelligence (AI) learns - and could
    use a fraction of the energy of current methods.

    ------------------------------

    Date: Fri, 10 Oct 2025 12:28:32 -0400
    From: Gabe Goldberg <gabe@gabegold.com>
    Subject: Apple Announces $2 Million Bug Bounty Reward for the Most Dangerous
    Exploits (WiReD)

    With the mercenary spyware industry booming, Apple VP Ivan Krsti-c tells
    WIRED that the company is also offering bonuses that could bring the max
    total reward for iPhone exploits to $5 million.

    https://www.wired.com/story/apple-announces-2-million-bug-bounty-reward/

    Apple Took Down These ICE-Tracking Apps. The Developers Aren't Giving Up.-arCLWe are going to do everything in our power to fight this,rCY says ICEBlock developer Joshua Aaron after Apple removed his app from the App
    Store.

    https://www.wired.com/story/apple-took-down-ice-tracking-apps-their-developers-arent-giving-up/

    ------------------------------

    Date: Mon, 18 Aug 2025 16:53:36 -0400
    From: Gabe Goldberg <gabe@gabegold.com>
    Subject: Every question you ask, every comment you make, will be
    recording you (The Register)

    When you're asking AI chatbots for answers, they're data-mining you

    https://www.theregister.com/2025/08/18/opinion_column_ai_surveillance/?td=rt-3a

    ------------------------------

    Date: Wed, 3 Sep 2025 11:30:54 -0400 (EDT)
    From: ACM TechNews <technews-editor@acm.org>
    Subject: EU to Expand Satellite Defenses After GPS Jamming of EC
    President's Flight (Franklin Okeke)

    Franklin Okeke, Computing (U.K.) (09/02/25), via ACM TechNews

    The European Union (EU) plans to deploy additional satellites in low Earth orbit to strengthen its ability to detect GPS interference, following an incident targeting European Commission (EC) President Ursula von der Leyen's flight. Pilots reportedly had to rely on paper maps to land von der Leyen's plane safely in Plovdiv, Bulgaria. An EU spokesperson said Bulgarian authorities suspect Russia was behind the jamming, though the Kremlin denies involvement. Similar GPS disruptions have affected the Baltic region and previous EU and U.K. flights.

    ------------------------------

    Date: Wed, 3 Sep 2025 11:30:54 -0400 (EDT)
    From: ACM TechNews <technews-editor@acm.org>
    Subject: NIST Enhances Security Controls for Improved Patching
    (Arielle Waldman)

    Arielle Waldman, Dark Reading (09/02/25), via ACM TechNews

    The U.S. National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) updated its Security and Privacy Control catalog to improve software patch and update management. The revisions focus on three key areas: standardized logging
    syntax to speed incident response, root-cause analysis to address underlying software issues, and designing systems for cyber-resiliency to maintain critical functions under attack. The update also emphasizes least-privilege access, flaw-remediation testing, and coordinated notifications.

    ------------------------------

    Date: Sat, 4 Oct 2025 22:23:13 -0600
    From: Matthew Kruk <mkrukg@gmail.com>
    Subject: When AI Came for Hollywood (The NY Times)

    https://www.nytimes.com/2025/10/04/opinion/ai-hollywood-tilly-norwood-actress.html

    In the immortal words of Emily Blunt, ``Good Lord, we're screwed.''

    She was on a podcast with Variety Monday when she was handed a headline
    about cinema's latest sensation, Tilly Norwood.

    Agents are circling the hot property, a fresh-faced young British brunette actress who is attracting global attention.

    Norwood is AI, and Blunt is P.O.ed. In fact, she says, she's terrified.

    Told that Tilly's creator, Eline Van der Velden, a Dutch former actress
    with a masters in physics, wants her to be the next Scarlett Johansson,
    Blunt protested. But we have Scarlett Johansson. (Cue the Invasion of
    the Body Snatchers music.)

    [This item follows Matthew's earlier item:
    She can fight monsters, flee explosions, and even cry on Graham Norton --
    but Tilly Norwood is no Hollywood darling.
    https://www.cbc.ca/news/entertainment/ai-actress-backlash-1.7647478
    I wonder if her eyes have back-lashes? I am afraid some of you may be
    her pupils, in which she should have been named IRIS. Tilly seems Silly.
    unless money is flowing into the Till(y). But she is certainly proof
    that AI has no limits. PGN]

    ------------------------------

    Date: Thu, 9 Oct 2025 14:25:42 -0700
    From: Lauren Weinstein <lauren@vortex.com>
    Subject: Small numbers of poisoned samples can wreck LLM AI models of any
    size (Cornell Study)

    https://arxiv.org/pdf/2510.07192

    ------------------------------

    Date: Wed, 3 Sep 2025 11:30:54 -0400 (EDT)
    From: ACM TechNews <technews-editor@acm.org>
    Subject: Taco Bell Rethinks Future of Voice AI at Drive-Through
    (Isabelle Bousquette)

    Isabelle Bousquette, The Wall Street Journal (08/29/25), via ACM TechNews

    Taco Bell has seen mixed results in its experiment with voice AI ordering at over 500 drives-through. Customers have reported glitches, delays, and even trolled the system with absurd orders, prompting concerns about reliability. The fastfood chain's Dane Mathews acknowledged the technology sometimes disappoints, noting it may not suit all locations, especially high-traffic ones. The chain is reassessing where AI adds value and when human staff
    should step in.

    ------------------------------

    Date: Wed, 3 Sep 2025 11:30:54 -0400 (EDT)
    From: ACM TechNews <technews-editor@acm.org>
    Subject: AI Tool Identifies 1,000 'Questionable' Scientific Journals
    (Daniel Strain)

    Daniel Strain, CU Boulder Today (08/28/25), via ACM TechNews

    Computer scientists at the University of Colorado Boulder developed an AI platform to identify questionable or "predatory" scientific journals. These journals often charge researchers high fees to publish work without proper
    peer review, undermining scientific credibility. The AI, trained on data
    from the non-profit Directory of Open Access Journals, analyzed 15,200
    journals and flagged over 1,400 as suspicious, with human experts later confirming more than 1,000 as likely problematic. The tool evaluates
    editorial boards, website quality, and publication practices.

    ------------------------------

    Date: Tue, 26 Aug 2025 07:04:13 -0700
    From: Lauren Weinstein <lauren@vortex.com>
    Subject: Stanford Study: AI is destroying job prospects for younger workers
    especially in computing (Digital Economy)

    The Big Tech Billionaire CEO are toasting the destruction of young
    people's lives. THEY DO NOT CARE ABOUT YOU. -L

    https://digitaleconomy.stanford.edu/wp-content/uploads/2025/08/Canaries_BrynjolfssonChandarChen.pdf

    ------------------------------

    Date: Sat, 4 Oct 2025 09:02:12 -0700
    From: Lauren Weinstein <lauren@vortex.com>
    Subject: The dangers of AI coding

    I am SO glad I phased out of most coding years ago, except as needed for my
    own systems. Those jobs are toast. But the dangers are very real.

    Just now I needed a Bash script for a network monitoring task. I must have written dozens of these in various forms over the years. Pings and status
    flags and the usual stuff.

    So this time, just for the hell of it, I asked Gemini (free version of
    course) to do it:

    "write me a bash script that will ping a specific ip address and when the
    pings start failing keep trying to ping and then when the pings are
    successful again send a specific curl command to that ip address"

    wAnd about 10 seconds or less later out came a completely reasonable
    looking, nicely commented Bash script, along with a reminder to make
    the file executable and how to stop it with ^C.

    This of course is a very simple, really trivial task, and I was able to
    quickly read through the code and verify that it looked correct.

    The problem of course is obvious. I could do this verification only because
    I have enough skill to easily write that code MYSELF, it would just take me more time. If the code were more complex and/or voluminous, just checking
    could range from very lengthy to utterly impractical to do at all, meaning
    any errors could go undetected with everything that implies, especially for dangerous "sleeper" bugs.

    There may be a useful analogy to vehicle driver assist systems, that may
    lull drivers into being less attentive and causing them to be unable to
    respond to emergency situations quickly when their intervention is most required.

    Crashing code and crashing cars. All very dangerous.

    ------------------------------

    Date: Thu, 25 Sep 2025 14:54:28 -0400
    From: Gabe Goldberg <gabe@gabegold.com>
    Subject: AI safety tool flags student activity, spurs debate on privacy and
    accuracy (san.com)

    https://san.com/cc/ai-safety-tool-flags-student-activity-spurs-debate-on-privacy-and-accuracy/

    In federal lawsuit, students allege Lawrence school district's AI
    surveillance tool violates their rights

    https://lawrencekstimes.com/2025/08/01/usd497-gaggle-lawsuit-filed/

    ------------------------------

    Date: Fri, 10 Oct 2025 15:48:55 -0600
    From: Matthew Kruk <mkrukg@gmail.com>
    Subject: The AI Prompt That Could End the World (The NY Times)

    https://www.nytimes.com/2025/10/10/opinion/ai-destruction-technology-future.html

    How much do we have to fear from AI, really? It's a question I've been
    masking experts since the debut of ChatGPT in late 2022.

    The AI pioneer Yoshua Bengio, a computer science professor at the Universit=C3=A9 de Montr=C3=A9al, is the most-cited researcher alive, in any discipline. When I spoke with him in 2024, Dr. Bengio told me that he had trouble sleeping while thinking of the future. Specifically, he was worried that an AI would engineer a lethal pathogen == some sort of
    super-coronavirus -- to eliminate humanity. ``I don't think there's
    anything close in terms of the scale of danger,'' he said.

    Contrast Dr. Bengio's view with that of his frequent collaborator Yann
    LeCun, who heads AI research at Mark Zuckerberg's Meta. Like Dr. Bengio,
    Dr. LeCun is one of the world's most-cited scientists. He thinks that AI
    will usher in a new era of prosperity and that discussions of existential
    risk are ridiculous. ``You can think of A.I. as an amplifier of human intelligence,'' he said in 2023.

    ------------------------------

    Date: Thu, 9 Oct 2025 15:24:59 -0400
    From: Gabe Goldberg <gabe@gabegold.com>
    Subject: Recruiters Use AI to Scan Resumes; Applicants Are Trying to Trick
    It (The NYT Times)

    In an escalating cat-and-mouse game, job hunters are trying to fool AI into moving their applications to the top of the pile with embedded instructions.

    https://www.nytimes.com/2025/10/07/business/ai-chatbot-prompts-resumes.html?smid=nytcore-ios-share&referringSource=articleShare

    ...read comments.

    ------------------------------

    Date: Wed, 8 Oct 2025 17:28:53 -0400
    From: Gabe Goldberg <gabe@gabegold.com>
    Subject: Tristan Harris on The Dangers of Unregulated AI on Humanity and
    the Workforce (The Daily Show YouTube)

    rCLThis does not have to be our destiny.rCY Co-founder of the Center for Humane Technology Tristan Harris sits down with Jon Stewart to discuss how AI has already disrupted the workforce as current iterations of the technology have dropped entry-level work by 13%, tech companies prioritization of their first-to-market stance over product and human safety, and how reliance on AI
    is stifling human growth. #DailyShow #TristanHarris #AI

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=675d_6WGPbo

    [Also noted by Matthew Kruk. PGN]

    ------------------------------

    Date: Tue, 7 Oct 2025 08:25:38 -0700
    From: Lauren Weinstein <lauren@vortex.com>
    Subject: The popular conception was that AI would be a danger to
    civilization because AI would be so smart, but the reality turns out to be
    the danger is that AI is so stupid.

    ------------------------------

    Date: Sat, 11 Oct 2025 08:52:15 -0700
    From: Lauren Weinstein <lauren@vortex.com>
    Subject: AI Data Centers Are an Even Bigger Disaster Than Previously Thought
    (Futurism)

    https://futurism.com/future-society/ai-data-centers-finances

    ------------------------------

    Date: Thu, 2 Oct 2025 11:00:41 +0100
    From: Martin Ward <martin@gkc.org.uk>
    Subject: Microsoft's agent mode is a tool for generating fake data
    (Pivot to AI via YouTube)

    Microsoft has put a co-pilot document generator into the online version of Office 365, called "agent mode". Quote: "In the same way, Vibe coding has transformed software development, the latest reasoning models in C-Pilot
    unlock agentic productivity for office artifacts"

    This is a gadget for faking evidence.

    Security researcher Kevin Bowmont gave agent mode a good try out. He asked
    it: "Make a spreadsheet about how our endpoint detection response tool
    blocks 100% of ransomware." It did exactly that. It made up a spreadsheet
    of completely fake data about the product's effectiveness. With graphs.

    Pivot to AI report:
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kH59-8dD08g

    ------------------------------

    Date: Tue, 7 Oct 2025 23:09:51 -0600
    From: Matthew Kruk <mkrukg@gmail.com>
    Subject: Cheer Up, or Else. China Cracks Down on the Haters and Cynics (NYT)

    https://www.nytimes.com/2025/10/08/world/asia/china-censorship-pessimism-despair.html

    As China struggles with economic discontent, Internet censors are silencing those who voice doubts about work, marriage, or simply sigh too loudly
    online.

    ------------------------------

    Date: Mon, 29 Sep 2025 11:45:38 -0600
    From: Matthew Kruk <mkrukg@gmail.com>
    Subject: Criminals offer reporter money to hack BBC (BBC)

    https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/c3w5n903447o

    Like many things in the shadowy world of cyber-crime, an insider threat is something very few people have experience of.

    Even fewer people want to talk about it.

    But I was given a unique and worrying experience of how hackers can
    leverage insiders when I myself was recently propositioned by a criminal
    gang.

    "If you are interested, we can offer you 15% of any ransom payment if you
    give us access to your PC."

    ------------------------------

    Date: Thu, 9 Oct 2025 20:54:45 -0600
    From: Matthew Kruk <mkrukg@gmail.com>
    Subject: Tech billionaires seem to be doom prepping. Should we all be
    worried? (BBC)

    https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/cly17834524o

    Mark Zuckerberg is said to have started work on Koolau Ranch, his sprawling 1,400-acre compound on the Hawaiian island of Kauai, as far back as 2014.

    It is set to include a shelter, complete with its own energy and food
    supplies, though the carpenters and electricians working on the site were banned from talking about it by non-disclosure agreements, according to a report by Wired magazine. A six-foot wall blocked the project from view of
    a nearby road.

    Asked last year if he was creating a doomsday bunker, the Facebook founder
    gave a flat "no". The underground space spanning some 5,000 square feet is,
    he explained, is "just like a little shelter, it's like a basement".

    ------------------------------

    Date: Fri, 3 Oct 2025 06:36:32 -0600
    From: Matthew Kruk <mkrukg@gmail.com>
    Subject: Japan faces Asahi beer shortage after cyber-attack (BBC)

    https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/c0r0y14ly5ro

    Japan is facing a shortage of Asahi products, including beer and bottled
    tea, as the drinks giant grapples with the impact of a major cyber-attack
    that has affected its operations in the country.

    Most of the Asahi Group's factories in Japan have been at a standstill
    since Monday, after the attack hit its ordering and delivering systems.

    Major Japanese retailers, including 7-Eleven and FamilyMart, have now
    warned customers to expect shortages of Asahi products.

    [A kiss is just a kiss, Asahi is just a sigh, as time goes by(e)...
    Casablanca. We'll always have Paris for wine -- and bierre. PGN]

    ------------------------------

    Date: Sat, 4 Oct 2025 01:23:59 +0000
    From: Victor Miller <victorsmiller@gmail.com>
    Subject: New WireTap Attack Extracts Intel SGX ECDSA Key via DDR4 Memory-Bus
    Interposer (The Hacker News)

    https://thehackernews.com/2025/10/new-wiretap-attack-extracts-intel-sgx.html?m=1

    ------------------------------

    Date: Mon, 29 Sep 2025 11:22:12 -0400 (EDT)
    From: ACM TechNews <technews-editor@acm.org>
    Subject: Exploit Allows for Takeover of Fleets of Unitree Robots
    (Evan Ackerman)

    Evan Ackerman, *IEEE Spectrum* (09/25/25), via ACM TechNews

    Security researchers disclosed a critical Bluetooth Low Energy vulnerability
    in several robots manufactured by Chinese robotics company Unitree that
    gives attackers full root access and enables worm-like self-propagation
    between nearby devices. The exploit, called UniPwn, affects Unitree's Go2
    and B2 quadrupeds as well as its G1 and H1 humanoids, and arises from
    hardcoded encryption keys and insufficient packet validation. Attackers can inject malicious code disguised as Wi-Fi credentials, leading to persistent compromise and potential botnet formation.

    ------------------------------

    Date: Fri, 26 Sep 2025 11:32:18 -0400 (EDT)
    From: ACM TechNews <technews-editor@acm.org>
    Subject: Google Says 90% of Tech Workers Are Now Using AI at Work
    (Lisa Eadicicco)

    Lisa Eadicicco, CNN (09/23/25), via ACM TechNews

    Of 5,000 global technology professionals surveyed by Google's DORA research decision, the vast majority (90%) said they now use AI in their jobs, up
    from just 14% who did so in 2024. However, the survey found only 20% of respondents place "a lot" of trust in the quality of AI-generated code, compared to 23% who trust it "a little" and 46% who trust it "somewhat."

    ------------------------------

    Date: Sat, 27 Sep 2025 10:48:55 +0100
    From: Martin Ward <martin@gkc.org.uk>
    Subject: Neon buys phone calls to train AI, then leaks them all

    Neon Mobile is an app that sells your phone calls to AI companies for
    training, and pays you 15rCo30 cents per minute!

    Could there be a RISK of all this personal data leaking?

    One day after reporting on the new app, Techcrunch reported that Neon's publicly accessible web site listed "data about the most recent calls made
    by the apprCOs users, as well as providing public web links to their raw audio files and the transcript text"

    Pivot to AI report:
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=G_LKccOiCoo

    ------------------------------

    Date: Sat, 4 Oct 2025 07:23:13 -0700
    From: Lauren Weinstein <lauren@vortex.com>
    Subject: Government ID data used for age verification stolen
    (This Week in Security)

    [Gee, as if nobody predicted stuff like this, huh?]

    https://this.weekinsecurity.com/discord-says-users-government-ids-used-for-age-checks-stolen-by-hackers/

    ------------------------------

    Date: Fri, 26 Sep 2025 15:23:40 -0600
    From: Matthew Kruk <mkrukg@gmail.com>
    Subject: Federal cyber agency warns of 'serious and urgent' attack on
    tech used by remote workers (CBC)

    https://www.cbc.ca/news/politics/cisco-cyber-attack-vpn-1.7644591

    Government cyber-agencies around the world are rushing to clamp down on
    what appears to be an advanced and sophisticated espionage campaign
    targeting popular security software used by remote workers.

    Calling the threat "serious and urgent," Canada's Communication Security Establishment's (CSE) Centre for Cyber Security joined its international
    allies Thursday urging organizations to take immediate action to patch up vulnerabilities following a widespread hit on the technology security
    company Cisco.

    ------------------------------

    Date: Sat, 11 Oct 2025 12:44:20 -0400
    From: "Gabe Goldberg" <gabe@gabegold.com>
    Subject: Billions of Dollars rCyVanishedrCO: Low-Profile Bankruptcy Rings Alarms
    on Wall Street (The New York Times)

    The unraveling of First Brands, a midsize auto-parts maker, is exposing
    hidden losses at international banks and rCLprivate creditrCY lenders.

    Unlike traditional banks, private credit lenders say, they have the
    ability to lend quickly because they understand complicated, risky
    businesses and do not need to worry about repaying ordinary depositors
    or reporting public earnings.

    Trillions of dollars have been plowed into private credit over the past
    decade, principally from pension funds, endowments and other groups that
    rely on such investments to fulfill obligations to retirees and the like. EditorsrCO Picks
    Out of This World Fashion for Life on Earth
    Should I Keep Donating to an Animal Shelter That Treats Employees Badly?
    Can I Take Batteries on a Plane? What to Know Before You Fly.

    The Trump administration made moves this summer to allow 401(k) plans to
    invest savings into the private equity funds that extend private credit
    to companies, raising the stakes even further.

    The First Brands bankruptcy could amount to something of an
    I-told-you-so moment for the traditional bankers and private-credit
    skeptics who have long maintained that these upstart lenders deserve
    more scrutiny.

    https://www.nytimes.com/2025/10/10/business/first-brands-bankruptcy-wall-street.html?smid=nytcore-ios-share&referringSource=articleShare

    ------------------------------

    Date: Thu, 25 Sep 2025 23:08:03 -0600
    From: "Matthew Kruk" <mkrukg@gmail.com>
    Subject: 911 Service Is Restored in Louisiana and Mississippi (NYTimes)

    https://www.nytimes.com/2025/09/25/us/mississippi-louisiana-outages-911-emergency.html

    Emergency call service was disrupted across Louisiana and Mississippi for
    more than two hours on Thursday afternoon, officials said, citing damage to fiber optic lines operated by AT&T.

    Gov. Tate Reeves of Mississippi said that the staterCOs Emergency Management Agency had received reports that AT&T was responding to rCLa series of fiber cuts,rCY which he said had interrupted service in Mississippi and Louisiana.

    Scott Simmons, a spokesman for the Mississippi Emergency Management Agency, said there were no indications of foul play, and that AT&T was
    investigating.

    ------------------------------

    Date: Thu, 2 Oct 2025 08:44:19 -0700
    From: geoff goodfellow <geoff@iconia.com>
    Subject: How an Internet mapping glitch turned a random Kansas farm into a
    digital hell (Fusion)

    EXCERPT:
    An hourrCOs drive from Wichita, Kansas, in a little town called Potwin, there is a 360-acre piece of land with a very big problem.

    The plot has been owned by the Vogelman family for more than a hundred
    years, though the current owner, Joyce Taylor n|-e Vogelman, 82, now rents
    it out. The acreage is quiet and remote: a farm, a pasture, an old orchard,
    two barns, some hog shacks and a two-story house. ItrCOs the kind of place
    you move to if you want to get away from it all. The nearest neighbor is a
    mile away, and the closest big town has just 13,000 people. It is real,
    rural America; in fact, itrCOs a two-hour drive from the exact geographical center of the United States.

    But instead of being a place of respite, the people who live on Joyce TaylorrCOs land find themselves in a technological horror story.

    For the last decade, Taylor and her renters have been visited by all kinds
    of mysterious trouble. They've been accused of being identity thieves, spammers, scammers and fraudsters. They've gotten visited by FBI agents, federal marshals, IRS collectors, ambulances searching for suicidal
    veterans, and police officers searching for runaway children. They've found people scrounging around in their barn. The renters have been doxxed, their names and addresses posted on the Internet by vigilantes. Once, someone
    left a broken toilet in the driveway as a strange, indefinite threat.

    All in all, the residents of the Taylor property have been treated like criminals for a decade. And until I called them this week, they had no idea why.

    To understand what happened to the Taylor farm, you have to know a little
    bit about how digital cartography works in the modern erarCoin particular, a form of location service known as rCLIP mapping:. [...]

    https://archive.ph/zHha3

    ------------------------------

    Date: Fri, 26 Sep 2025 13:04:28 +0300
    From: Amos Shapir <amos083@gmail.com>
    Subject: Microsoft cuts off cloud services to Israeli military unit (NBC)

    I don't know which is more unsettling: That a private company takes action against a sovereign nation's military at war -- or that a nation at war
    keeps some of its top secrets on a cloud managed by a foreign private
    company.

    ------------------------------

    Date: Fri, 26 Sep 2025 10:42:17 +0100
    From: Martin Ward <martin@gkc.org.uk>
    Subject: ShareFile website

    I recently had to set up an account on ShareFile.

    (1) I used the Firefox feature to generate a strong password. The website
    said there was a "bad character" in the generated password. It wouldn't say *which* character, so I had to go through taking out characters one at a
    time until it was happy. It turned out to be "<". Presumably, this
    character triggered a bug in their software somewhere. Rather than fix the
    bug, they added a check to prevent this character from appearing in
    passwords

    (2) I pasted in my phone number and it complained that spaces are not
    allowed in phone numbers. The computer code to strip spaces from a phone number is not particularly difficult or complex to write: they had already implemented the code to check for spaces. But I had to manually execute the process of stripping spaces from

    These are irritants rather than security hazards: but given that the quality
    of the customer-facing interface software is so poor, it does not inspire
    much confidence in the security of their file sharing software generally.

    At least the file I was sharing was encrypted before uploading to the
    ShareFile site!

    ------------------------------

    Date: Sat, 28 Oct 2023 11:11:11 -0800
    From: RISKS-request@csl.sri.com
    Subject: Abridged info on RISKS (comp.risks)

    The ACM RISKS Forum is a MODERATED digest. Its Usenet manifestation is
    comp.risks, the feed for which is donated by panix.com as of June 2011.
    SUBSCRIPTIONS: The mailman Web interface can be used directly to
    subscribe and unsubscribe:
    http://mls.csl.sri.com/mailman/listinfo/risks

    SUBMISSIONS: to risks@CSL.sri.com with meaningful SUBJECT: line that
    includes the string `notsp'. Otherwise your message may not be read.
    *** This attention-string has never changed, but might if spammers use it.
    SPAM challenge-responses will not be honored. Instead, use an alternative
    address from which you never send mail where the address becomes public!
    The complete INFO file (submissions, default disclaimers, archive sites,
    copyright policy, etc.) has moved to the ftp.sri.com site:
    <risksinfo.html>.
    *** Contributors are assumed to have read the full info file for guidelines!

    OFFICIAL ARCHIVES: http://www.risks.org takes you to Lindsay Marshall's
    delightfully searchable html archive at newcastle:
    http://catless.ncl.ac.uk/Risks/VL.IS --> VoLume, ISsue.
    Also, ftp://ftp.sri.com/risks for the current volume/previous directories
    or ftp://ftp.sri.com/VL/risks-VL.IS for previous VoLume
    If none of those work for you, the most recent issue is always at
    http://www.csl.sri.com/users/risko/risks.txt, and index at /risks-34.00
    ALTERNATIVE ARCHIVES: http://seclists.org/risks/ (only since mid-2001)
    *** NOTE: If a cited URL fails, we do not try to update them. Try
    browsing on the keywords in the subject line or cited article leads.
    Apologies for what Office365 and SafeLinks may have done to URLs.
    Special Offer to Join ACM for readers of the ACM RISKS Forum:
    <http://www.acm.org/joinacm1>

    ------------------------------

    End of RISKS-FORUM Digest 34.77
    ************************

    --- Synchronet 3.21a-Linux NewsLink 1.2