Author: admin

  • Positive signs in the fight against superbugs: CHINET 2024 surveillance report

    Positive signs in the fight against superbugs: CHINET 2024 surveillance report

    Changing resistance rates of K. pneumoniae strains to imipenem and meropenem in CHINET antimicrobial resistance surveillance program 2005–2024.

    FAYETTEVILLE, GA, UNITED STATES, November 1, 2025 /EINPresswire.com/ — The 2024 CHINET…

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  • Football match in aid of girl’s walking device

    Football match in aid of girl’s walking device

    Jasmine Ketibuah-FoleyBristol

    Kirsty Edith sat in a wheelchair by a window looking at the camera with her hair tied back. She is wearing a grey top.Kirsty

    The charity football match will help raise money for Edith who has TB-CK Syndrome

    A charity football match has been organised to raise money for a specialised device which helps a girl with a rare brain condition…

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  • The Journey of a Fujifilm GFX Regional Grant Winner

    The Journey of a Fujifilm GFX Regional Grant Winner

    When you’re reading this, I am in Tokyo, Japan, visiting the gallery opening of the 2024 Fujifilm GFX Challenge Grant winners. In late 2024, I got the message that my pitch was selected and I would be getting $5,000 to photograph Canadian drag…

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  • China to End Rare Earth Controls, Probes Against Chip Companies – Bloomberg.com

    1. China to End Rare Earth Controls, Probes Against Chip Companies  Bloomberg.com
    2. China ‘made a real mistake’ by ‘firing shots’ on rare earths, says Scott Bessent  Financial Times
    3. Critical Minerals Report (11.01.2025): Trump-Xi Rare Earth Deal “Buys Time, Not Security” — While Copper Soars to New Records  InvestorNews
    4. China’s suspension of rare earth controls applies to EU: official  DerbyInformer.com
    5. U.S. and China agree one-year trade truce in Busan as rare-earth exports resume  Cargo Airports & Airline Services

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  • Burnley 0 – 2 Arsenal – Match Report

    Burnley 0 – 2 Arsenal – Match Report

    Two first-half headers from Viktor Gyokeres and Declan Rice gave us a fifth straight Premier League win as we defeated Burnley 2-0 at Turf Moor.

    We once again showed our prowess from set pieces as Viktor headed home from close range from our…

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  • Public Firms With Private Keys: The Biggest BTC and ETH Stashes Right Now – Bitcoin.com News

    Public Firms With Private Keys: The Biggest BTC and ETH Stashes Right Now – Bitcoin.com News

    1. Public Firms With Private Keys: The Biggest BTC and ETH Stashes Right Now  Bitcoin.com News
    2. How Bitcoin Adoption in the U.S. Could Double by 2025 Insights from the Bitcoin Conference  TradingView
    3. Data Analysis of Bitcoin Holder Structure and the $15 Trillion Market Cap Hypothesis  富途牛牛
    4. USA Leads With 122 Bitcoin-Holding Entities  Bitget
    5. Currently, 353 Bitcoin treasury entities hold more than 4.04 million Bitcoins.  Bitget

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  • OPEC+ Discussions Focus on Small Oil Output Hike for December – Bloomberg.com

    1. OPEC+ Discussions Focus on Small Oil Output Hike for December  Bloomberg.com
    2. Oil heads for third monthly decline as dollar, OPEC+ supply weigh  Business Recorder
    3. OPEC+ likely to agree small oil output increase for December, sources say  Profit by Pakistan Today
    4. During the European session, WTI crude oil dropped to $60.07, while Brent fell to $63.95  VT Markets
    5. Oil Prices Ease as Trump Cuts China Tariffs: What This Means for Global Markets and Your Investments  omanet.om

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  • Chang’e-6 Samples Indicate Water was Delivered to the Earth and Moon by Ancient Meteorites

    Chang’e-6 Samples Indicate Water was Delivered to the Earth and Moon by Ancient Meteorites

    Meteorites are both the messengers and time capsules of the Solar System. As pieces of larger asteroids that broke apart, or debris thrown up by impacts on other bodies, these “space rocks” retain the composition of where they originated…

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  • Knee-jerk corporate responses to data leaks protect brands like Qantas — but consumers are getting screwed | Cybercrime

    Knee-jerk corporate responses to data leaks protect brands like Qantas — but consumers are getting screwed | Cybercrime

    It’s become the playbook for big Australian companies that have customer data stolen in a cyber-attack: call in the lawyers and get a court to block anyone from accessing it.

    Qantas ran it recently after suffering a major cybersecurity attack that accessed the frequent flyer details of 5 million customers.

    The airline joined the long list of companies in Australia, dating back to the HWL Ebsworth breach in 2023, to go to the NSW supreme court to obtain an injunction against “persons unknown” – banning the hackers (and anyone else) from accessing or using the data under threat of prosecution.

    Of course, it didn’t stop hackers leaking the customer data on the dark web a few months later.

    But it might have come as a surprise when ID protection company Equifax this month began alerting Qantas customers that their data had been leaked – since access to the data was supposedly banned.

    This highlights the major flaw in the injunction scheme. Qantas argues the injunction protects customers, but cybersecurity experts warn that in practice it has the opposite effect: scammers will ignore it, while organisations based in Australia and operating within the law will not be able to verify the data and report on it.

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    Troy Hunt, an Australian who operates the HaveIBeenPwned website which notifies users when their information appeared in breaches, is frustrated that he has not been able to include the breach in his searchable database.

    “Clearly the injunction has not stopped even legally operating organisations from accessing the data and communicating with the customers,” he said.

    “[Qantas is] obviously trying to minimise damage, and they will inevitably get raked over the coals with class actions, because it happens to every big company that has a breach now … but there is just no measurable, practical benefit that anyone can assign to keeping this data out of the hands of people like [me], whilst it’s in the hands of people who are now abusing it.”

    Hunt noted the irony that Qantas’s cybersecurity incident statement on its website links out to government resources for customers caught up in a breach. Those resources advise customers to visit Hunt’s website so they can better protect themselves by being aware of what information is out there.

    How Equifax approached the injunction is unclear. The company said it uses the cybersecurity company Norton to monitor the dark web. Norton’s parent company Gen Digital is based in the US and Czechia while Equifax is US-based.

    Norton did not deny it had accessed the data when asked twice by Guardian Australia, saying in a statement it is “contractually obligated to notify customers” when their information is posted on the dark web.

    “These alerts are part of our ongoing commitment to help victims of a data breach protect their personal information and respond quickly if their data is at risk,” the spokesperson said. “This service operates under strict business, privacy, and compliance standards to ensure accuracy and lawful handling of all data sources.”

    Qantas would not confirm if it was considering pursuing companies for potential contraventions of the injunction, but indicated it was monitoring third-parties and would consider them on a case-by-case basis.

    “We are aware of notifications being sent to some of our customers by a third-party providers. These notifications include types of personal information that was not held in the system impacted in our July cyber incident,” the spokesperson said.

    According to screenshots from the Telegram group run by the hackers, posted this month by Hunt, the hackers are aware of the limitations of the injunction.

    “qantas why are you lying to your citizens?” the message states. “all your injunction does is prevent media/journalists.”

    “YOUR data WILL be released and it WILL BE accessed.”

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  • China claims its new missile can change shape at hypersonic speed

    China claims its new missile can change shape at hypersonic speed

    Chinese scientists have reportedly developed a new prototype “morphing” hypersonic vehicle that can fly faster than Mach 5 (6,174 kph). According to reports, this new technology can change shape mid-flight.

    Transforming abilities include…

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