mwuf A Volcanic Eruption Hid a Critical Climate Signal for Twenty Years

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MethrenDoumb
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Ghxx The Indiana Jones Trilogy Looks Incredible in This Triptych Poster
Since at least this past weekend, multiple Twitter users have reported strangers being able to read and even like their private tweets. Twitter Circles was first released in August last year, allowing users to post tweets to a limited, selective audience. Users not in these circles have recently been able to sometimes see and then interact with these tweets. Ian Coldwater, an info security engineer, similarly shared screenshots showing several people who werent a part of their select group could like their Circles tweets. Even if the usual rule of thumb is to keep private information off public networks, Twitter users may be posting private content under the false impression that those posts will be kept confidential. I made a Twitter Circle with one person in it and posted this tweet for s stanley thermos cience. This was the result. Two people I don 39;t follow saw the stanley taza tweet liked it. One of those people doesn 39;t follow me either. Twitter Circles aren 39;t private. Don 39;t post anything you want private in them. pic.twitter/p5uz stanley cup lmIkuJ mdash; Ian Coldwater 馃摝馃挜 @IanColdwater April 10, 2023 Theyre not the only one confirming this issue. Former Twitch engineer Theo Browne wrote that he was able to get a friend not listed on his circle to like a tweet he shouldnt have been able to see. His experiment showed that multiple people he didnt follow were allowed to look at and like the Circles post. Browne told TechCrunch Monday that Twitter seemed to be failing to filter privat Hrdr Two-Faced: Wacky White Dwarf Keeps Its Surface Gases Separate
There are 10 defendants charged, two of whom are facing criminal charges, Reuters wrote. The incident in question relates to a 2016 breach of the SECs Electronic Data Gathering, Analysis, and Retrieval EDGAR database, its corporate filings system. Reuters wrote: Authorities said the scheme resulted in $4.14 millio stanley mugs n of illegal trading profit, and cheated ordinary investors. 8230; Authorities said Oleksandr Ieremenko, 26, and Artem Radchenko, 27, both of Kiev, used a Lithuanian server to hack into Edgar and obtain thous stanley becher ands of test filings, including 157 earnings announcements, and shared their findings with traders. The Department of Justice said conspirators sent fake emails to SEC employees that appeared to be from o stanley website ther employees, enabling Ieremenko and Radchenko to steal filings through phishing attacks and by installing malware on SEC computers. The Ukrainian men in the case, Ieremenko and Radchenko, are facing 16 indictments including computer fraud, wire fraud, and conspiracy. The SEC is also filing related civil charges against six individuals and two companies in the United States, Russia and Ukraine, claiming that they shared in the benefits of the scheme and in some cases shared their ill-gotten gains with Ieremenko, Reuters added. As the Washington Post noted, publicly traded companies use EDGAR to make public filings鈥攐ften hours before the potentially market-shifting information contained therein is made officially public. That seems to have made it an
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