Darkness

Hope for Ukraine Commemorates Second Anniversary of Ukraine War, Advocates for Foreign Aid Amid Ongoing Crisis

Retrieved on: 
Wednesday, February 21, 2024

Since Russia invaded Ukraine on February 24th, 2022, Hope for Ukraine has been at the forefront of delivering aid to Ukrainians affected by the devastation of war.

Key Points: 
  • Since Russia invaded Ukraine on February 24th, 2022, Hope for Ukraine has been at the forefront of delivering aid to Ukrainians affected by the devastation of war.
  • Yuriy Boyechko, President of Hope for Ukraine, has been on the ground since the war's inception.
  • Despite the significant challenges the Ukranian people face, Hope for Ukraine has remained steadfast in its mission to provide aid and support."
  • Hope For Ukraine has launched an after-school arts and crafts program that is attended weekly by around 600 children of war.

IBM Report: Identity Comes Under Attack, Straining Enterprises' Recovery Time from Breaches

Retrieved on: 
Wednesday, February 21, 2024

CAMBRIDGE, Mass., Feb. 21, 2024 /PRNewswire/ -- IBM (NYSE: IBM) today released the 2024 X-Force Threat Intelligence Index highlighting an emerging global identity crisis as cybercriminals double down on exploiting user identities to compromise enterprises worldwide. According to IBM X-Force, IBM Consulting's offensive and defensive security services arm, in 2023, cybercriminals saw more opportunities to "log in" versus hack into corporate networks through valid accounts – making this tactic a preferred weapon of choice for threat actors.

Key Points: 
  • Ransomware attacks on enterprises saw a nearly 12% drop last year, as larger organizations opt against paying and decrypting, in favor of rebuilding their infrastructure.
  • With this growing pushback likely to impact adversaries' revenue expectations from encryption-based extortion, groups that previously specialized in ransomware were observed pivoting to infostealers.
  • "Identity is being used against enterprises time and time again, a problem that will worsen as adversaries invest in AI to optimize the tactic."
  • Sign up for the 2024 IBM X-Force Threat Intelligence webinar on Thursday, March 7th at 11:00 am ET.

IBM Report: Identity Comes Under Attack, Straining Enterprises' Recovery Time from Breaches

Retrieved on: 
Wednesday, February 21, 2024

CAMBRIDGE, Mass., Feb. 21, 2024 /PRNewswire/ -- IBM (NYSE: IBM) today released the 2024 X-Force Threat Intelligence Index highlighting an emerging global identity crisis as cybercriminals double down on exploiting user identities to compromise enterprises worldwide. According to IBM X-Force, IBM Consulting's offensive and defensive security services arm, in 2023, cybercriminals saw more opportunities to "log in" versus hack into corporate networks through valid accounts – making this tactic a preferred weapon of choice for threat actors.

Key Points: 
  • Ransomware attacks on enterprises saw a nearly 12% drop last year, as larger organizations opt against paying and decrypting, in favor of rebuilding their infrastructure.
  • With this growing pushback likely to impact adversaries' revenue expectations from encryption-based extortion, groups that previously specialized in ransomware were observed pivoting to infostealers.
  • "Identity is being used against enterprises time and time again, a problem that will worsen as adversaries invest in AI to optimize the tactic."
  • Sign up for the 2024 IBM X-Force Threat Intelligence webinar on Thursday, March 7th at 11:00 am ET.

New $2.5 Million Morehouse College "Finishing Well" Scholarship Established by Philanthropists Yolanda and Dale Jones to Assist Scholars with Financial Needs

Retrieved on: 
Tuesday, February 20, 2024

The gift to Morehouse was inspired in part by the financial challenges that Jones and his twin brother faced as first-generation college students 42 years ago.

Key Points: 
  • The gift to Morehouse was inspired in part by the financial challenges that Jones and his twin brother faced as first-generation college students 42 years ago.
  • He also became permanently disabled while we were in school," said Jones, a Trustee Emeritus at Morehouse College.
  • The Yolanda and Dale Jones Family Endowed Scholarship Fund will provide a safety net of financial support to help juniors and seniors reach graduation.
  • "We are pleased to establish the Yolanda and Dale Jones Family Endowed Scholarship Fund of $2.5 million to help students finish well," Jones said.

Lonestar Successfully Tests Data Center Concept En Route To The Moon

Retrieved on: 
Monday, February 19, 2024

ST. PETERSBURG, Fla., Feb. 19, 2024 /PRNewswire/ -- Lonestar Data Holdings Inc. announces the successful pivotal test of its lunar data storage concept with the transmission of the Declaration of Independence in flight to Intuitive Machines' Nova-C lander en route to the Moon and receipt of a transmission back of the Constitution and Bill of Rights. This test of data transmission for premium data storage marks an unprecedented technical achievement for a new era in premium secure data storage and Disaster Recovery as a Service (DRaaS). The milestone was achieved by Lonestar's Independence Mission aimed at establishing a series of increasingly sophisticated data centers on and around the Moon. Lonestar's lunar data centers are designed for data storage, edge processing, and the capability to restore digital information. This success now clears the path for Lonestar's next lunar mission later this year.

Key Points: 
  • This test of data transmission for premium data storage marks an unprecedented technical achievement for a new era in premium secure data storage and Disaster Recovery as a Service (DRaaS).
  • The milestone was achieved by Lonestar's Independence Mission aimed at establishing a series of increasingly sophisticated data centers on and around the Moon.
  • Lonestar's lunar data centers are designed for data storage, edge processing, and the capability to restore digital information.
  • The successful test took place 13:56 US Eastern today with the Nova-C Lander en route to the Moon.

Truman Capote was ruined when he published his society friends’ secrets. Was Answered Prayers worth it?

Retrieved on: 
Friday, February 16, 2024

In November 1975, Truman Capote, the proudly gay author of Breakfast at Tiffany’s and In Cold Blood, unveiled the hotly anticipated second instalment of his unpublished novel, Answered Prayers.

Key Points: 
  • In November 1975, Truman Capote, the proudly gay author of Breakfast at Tiffany’s and In Cold Blood, unveiled the hotly anticipated second instalment of his unpublished novel, Answered Prayers.
  • Capote ended his days a social pariah in his former New York society circles, incapacitated by a lifetime of prodigious substance abuse.
  • The story to blame, La Côte Basque, 1965, takes its title from its setting: an achingly fashionable French restaurant in Manhattan.
  • However, Mrs. Hopkins was une autre chose: a sensation to unsettle the suavest Côte Basque client.
  • Mrs. Kennedy and her sister had elicited not a murmur, nor had the entrances of Lauren Bacall and Katharine Cornell and Clare Booth Luce.
  • However, Mrs. Hopkins was une autre chose: a sensation to unsettle the suavest Côte Basque client.

The real-life ‘Mrs. Bang-Bang’

  • There was talk of the spate of burglaries that had recently occurred in the area.
  • Ann, who suffered from insecurity and social anxiety, drank more than usual.
  • Returning home with her husband, she washed down some sleeping pills and went to bed, not long after midnight.
  • At two in the morning, Ann was woken by the sound of her dog growling.

‘What I’m writing is true’

  • Regardless of whether he truly appreciated this, it seems fair to say Capote’s encounter with Ann Woodward made quite the impression on him.
  • Capote’s conception of Answered Prayers, which he struggled with and talked about for decades, developed over time.
  • In his monumental novel-cycle Remembrance of Things Past, Proust scrutinised the social machinations of the Parisian upper classes at the turn of the 20th century.
  • Capote conceived of his project – which took shape as a roman à clef – in equivalent terms.
  • What I’m writing is true, it’s real and it’s done in the very best prose style that I think any American writer could possibly achieve.
  • […] If Proust were an American living now in New York, this is what he would be doing.
  • What I’m writing is true, it’s real and it’s done in the very best prose style that I think any American writer could possibly achieve.
  • as is generally conceded, a beautiful girl of twelve or twenty, while she may merit attention, does not deserve admiration.

Masturbation, misogyny, murder

  • At the start of January 1966, Capote signed a contract with Random House for a novel titled Answered Prayers.
  • However, by the time he actually sat down to write the book, he was already under a great deal of pressure.
  • Masturbation, menstruation, misogyny, murder.
  • Readers who thought they were getting a finely wrought piece of social critique were left scratching their heads in bemusement.
  • Read more:
    In Killers of the Flower Moon, true crime reveals the paradoxes of the past

Was the book any good?


With the benefit of hindsight, I think the overwhelming majority missed the memo when it came to Answered Prayers.

  • By the same token, it is clear Answered Prayers responds to (and even builds on) advances made in his earlier work.
  • Gossip can serve a positive, even joyous function: it is a “social activity which produces and maintains the filiations” of community.
  • To put this another way: if used in a strategic and appropriate fashion, gossip can bring people together.
  • It can help to build and sustain social groupings predicated on the basis of shared knowledge (of sexual matters).
  • Consider Unspoiled Monsters, the first chapter in the posthumously published book.
  • If he had been absolutely factual, it would have been less believable but […] it might have been better.

Settling scores

  • In part, he was looking to settle scores.
  • Try as he might, Capote, who claimed his intentions had been misunderstood, couldn’t win the swans back over.
  • As chance, or maybe fate would have it, he died at exactly the same age as Ann Woodward.
  • Given how much they despised each other, I can’t help but wonder what Capote and Woodward would have made of such dismal symmetries.


Alexander Howard does not work for, consult, own shares in or receive funding from any company or organisation that would benefit from this article, and has disclosed no relevant affiliations beyond their academic appointment.

VIPRE Security Group's Annual Email Threat Landscape Shows Advanced Methods Needed for Security

Retrieved on: 
Wednesday, February 14, 2024

NEW YORK, Feb. 14, 2024 /PRNewswire/ -- VIPRE Security Group, a global leader and award-winning cybersecurity, privacy and data protection company, today released its report titled "Email Security in 2024: An Expert Look at Email-Based Threats." The 2024 predictions for email security in this report are based on an analysis of more than 7 billion emails processed by VIPRE worldwide during 2023. This equates to almost one email for everyone on the planet. Of those, roughly 1 billion (or 15%) were malicious.

Key Points: 
  • NEW YORK, Feb. 14, 2024 /PRNewswire/ -- VIPRE Security Group, a global leader and award-winning cybersecurity, privacy and data protection company, today released its report titled "Email Security in 2024: An Expert Look at Email-Based Threats.
  • " The 2024 predictions for email security in this report are based on an analysis of more than 7 billion emails processed by VIPRE worldwide during 2023.
  • As network security tools have improved in recent years, the corporate inbox has become an ever more attractive target to attackers.
  • Unfortunately, threat actors know this," said Usman Choudhary, general manager, VIPRE Security Group.

TCarta and Capella Space Partner to Leverage All-weather SAR Imagery for Coastline Management

Retrieved on: 
Tuesday, February 13, 2024

SAN FRANCISCO, Feb. 13, 2024 /PRNewswire/ -- Capella Space Corp., an American space tech company with data and satellite solutions for government and commercial applications, today announced a partnership with TCarta, a global provider of hydrospatial products and services, to add high-resolution SAR satellite imagery to TCarta's coastal monitoring and shoreline feature extraction solutions. This partnership will enable more consistent and reliable identification of coastline changes so coastal managers have the accurate and up-to-date information for mitigating the impacts of climate change.

Key Points: 
  • Rising oceans and melting glaciers are quickly changing the geography of the world's coastlines, reshaping ecosystems and threatening the livelihoods of coastal communities.
  • TCarta was as an early adopter of the Capella Space Analytics Partner Program looking to accelerate its research and development efforts with high-resolution SAR to enhance its state-of-the-art hydrospatial models.
  • "The implementation of Capella SAR in TCarta's coastal datasets means more accurate and actionable information in the hands of our clients."
  • We are thrilled to elevate our partnership so coastline managers can leverage the full value of 24/7, all-weather SAR imagery and automated tasking to help mitigate the impacts of climate change," said Dan Getman, Vice President of Product at Capella Space.

Migrating animals face collapsing numbers – major new UN report

Retrieved on: 
Monday, February 12, 2024

The first ever State of the World’s Migratory Species report, released today by the United Nations Convention on the Conservation of Migratory Species of Wild Animals, showed that the conservation status of many migratory species is getting worse.

Key Points: 
  • The first ever State of the World’s Migratory Species report, released today by the United Nations Convention on the Conservation of Migratory Species of Wild Animals, showed that the conservation status of many migratory species is getting worse.
  • The convention maintains a list of migratory species that are already in need of protection.
  • More than one in five (or 22%) of the already threatened migratory species now face extinction.

Which species are listed?

  • There are 4,508 species in the world that are migratory, and the convention lists 1,189.
  • What must be done

    My research has pointed out that migratory species undertake remarkable journeys that connect diverse habitats across the globe.

  • The report found that the threatened migratory species occurring in Africa, Asia and North America are experiencing the fastest declines.
  • Of the migratory species that the convention lists as needing some level of protection, 97% are under threat of extinction.

Migratory animals’ habitats are being destroyed

  • In Africa, 79% of new cropland over the past few decades has been established by destroying the natural vegetation where many migratory animals lived, the report says.
  • The report also points out that pollution and introducing alien invasive species into habitats of natural vegetation put pressure on these indigenous species.

Why migratory species are important

  • Migratory species consume tons of food daily.
  • For example, deep-sea creatures, particularly tiny zooplankton, migrate from deep waters to the surface at night to feed on phytoplankton.
  • Tiny marine animals are key to working out its climate impacts

    Protecting migratory species goes beyond conserving biodiversity; it is crucial for ensuring a healthier future for our planet.

What to do about it

  • This includes expanding protected areas used by migratory species, taking down fences and making more effort to connect protected areas to each other.
  • Stronger laws, enhanced international collaboration to curb illegal activities, and reducing bycatch in fisheries are urgently required, says the report.
  • This report marks a significant step towards creating a conservation roadmap for migratory species.
  • He is a senior Statistician at the University of Hohenheim, Stuttgart, Germany.
  • He is also affilicated with the One Mara Research Hub (OMRH) and the Greater Serengeti-Mara Conservation Society; both devoted to securing the future of the magnificient Greater-Serengeti Mara Ecosystem.

Morocco dinosaur discovery gives clues on why they went extinct

Retrieved on: 
Sunday, February 11, 2024

And that suggests their demise came suddenly, with the impact of a giant asteroid.

Key Points: 
  • And that suggests their demise came suddenly, with the impact of a giant asteroid.
  • The discovery of the 180km-wide Chixculub asteroid impact crater in Mexico suggested a sudden extinction of dinosaurs and other species, driven by the impact.
  • But others have argued that a long, slow decline in dinosaur diversity contributed to their extinction.
  • It’s not just that dinosaur fossils are so rare; the fossil record is also patchy.
  • Because it’s such a huge landmass, Africa probably had far more dinosaur species than North America.

What we’ve found

  • Dinosaurs may have swum out to islands searching for food, as deer and elephants do today, and some might have drowned.
  • Other dinosaurs might have been washed out to sea by floods or storms, or drowned in rivers that carried them downstream to the ocean.
  • And so, studying marine beds, and working over many years, we’ve slowly put together a picture of Africa’s last dinosaurs, bone by bone.
  • It was smaller than Chenanisaurus, about five metres long – small by dinosaur standards, but large compared to modern predators.
  • If so, that means dinosaurs were cut down in their prime; burning out rather than fading away.

What our findings show

  • For over 100 million years, they evolved and diversified, producing a remarkable range of species: predators, herbivores, aquatic species, even flying forms, the birds.
  • Then in a single, catastrophic moment, everything was wiped out in the months of darkness caused by dust and soot from the impact.


Nicholas R. Longrich does not work for, consult, own shares in or receive funding from any company or organisation that would benefit from this article, and has disclosed no relevant affiliations beyond their academic appointment.