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Breville’s smart steel Pizza Oven sees rare $200 price drop in return to $800 Amazon low

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We are now tracking a rare price drop on the Breville Smart Pizzaiolo Pizza Oven down at $799.99 shipped. Now $200 off at Amazon, this regularly $1,000 high-end pizza oven doesn’t go on sale very often. In fact, this is not only matching the Amazon all-time low but is also only the second time it has dropped this low and marks the first deal since back in February. Providing pro-grade pizza year round, this countertop cooker can reach temperatures up to 750-degrees to deliver “authentic wood-fired style pizzas in just 2 minutes.” Packed with presets for various styles including wood-fired, New York, pan, thin and crispy, and frozen, it leverages conductive heating for that gorgeous charred base and a “perfectly spotted crust” that’s “usually only achievable with a traditional brick oven.” More details below. 

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The post Breville’s smart steel Pizza Oven sees rare $200 price drop in return to $800 Amazon low appeared first on 9to5Toys.

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ownCloud vulnerability with maximum 10 severity score comes under “mass” exploitation

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Photograph depicts a security scanner extracting virus from a string of binary code. Hand with the word "exploit"

Enlarge (credit: Getty Images)

Security researchers are tracking what they say is the “mass exploitation” of a security vulnerability that makes it possible to take full control of servers running ownCloud, a widely used open-source filesharing server app.

The vulnerability, which carries the maximum severity rating of 10, makes it possible to obtain passwords and cryptographic keys allowing administrative control of a vulnerable server by sending a simple Web request to a static URL, ownCloud officials warned last week. Within four days of the November 21 disclosure, researchers at security firm Greynoise said, they began observing “mass exploitation” in their honeypot servers, which masqueraded as vulnerable ownCloud servers to track attempts to exploit the vulnerability. The number of IP addresses sending the web requests has slowly risen since then. At the time this post went live on Ars, it had reached 13.

Spraying the Internet

“We're seeing hits to the specific endpoint that exposes sensitive information, which would be considered exploitation,” Glenn Thorpe, senior director of security research & detection engineering at Greynoise, said in an interview on Mastodon. “At the moment, we've seen 13 IPs that are hitting our unadvertised sensors, which indicates that they are pretty much spraying it across the internet to see what hits.”

Read 11 remaining paragraphs | Comments

[post_excerpt] => Easy-to-exploit flaw can give hackers passwords and cryptographic keys to vulnerable servers. [post_date_gmt] => 2023-11-29 00:38:34 [post_date] => 2023-11-29 00:38:34 [post_modified_gmt] => 2023-11-29 00:38:34 [post_modified] => 2023-11-29 00:38:34 [post_status] => publish [comment_status] => closed [ping_status] => closed [guid] => https://arstechnica.com/?p=1986988 [meta] => Array ( [enclosure] => Array ( [0] => ) [syndication_source] => Ars Technica - All content [syndication_source_uri] => https://arstechnica.com [syndication_source_id] => https://feeds.arstechnica.com/arstechnica/index [rss:comments] => https://arstechnica.com/security/2023/11/owncloud-vulnerability-with-a-maximum-10-severity-rating-comes-under-mass-exploitation/#comments [wfw:commentRSS] => https://arstechnica.com/security/2023/11/owncloud-vulnerability-with-a-maximum-10-severity-rating-comes-under-mass-exploitation/feed/ [syndication_feed] => https://feeds.arstechnica.com/arstechnica/index [syndication_feed_id] => 1 [syndication_permalink] => https://arstechnica.com/?p=1986988 [syndication_item_hash] => 0c9e8f65560bf02269076dbc106c2c21 ) [post_type] => post [post_author] => 15 [tax_input] => Array ( [post_tag] => Array ( [0] => 524 [1] => 905 [2] => 5621 [3] => 19956 [4] => 19957 [5] => 653 [6] => 441 ) [post_format] => Array ( ) [category] => Array ( [0] => 322 [1] => 28 ) ) )

Decide filter: Returning post, everything seems orderly :ownCloud vulnerability with maximum 10 severity score comes under “mass” exploitation

Array ( [post_title] => ownCloud vulnerability with maximum 10 severity score comes under “mass” exploitation [post_content] =>

Photograph depicts a security scanner extracting virus from a string of binary code. Hand with the word "exploit"

Enlarge (credit: Getty Images)

Security researchers are tracking what they say is the “mass exploitation” of a security vulnerability that makes it possible to take full control of servers running ownCloud, a widely used open-source filesharing server app.

The vulnerability, which carries the maximum severity rating of 10, makes it possible to obtain passwords and cryptographic keys allowing administrative control of a vulnerable server by sending a simple Web request to a static URL, ownCloud officials warned last week. Within four days of the November 21 disclosure, researchers at security firm Greynoise said, they began observing “mass exploitation” in their honeypot servers, which masqueraded as vulnerable ownCloud servers to track attempts to exploit the vulnerability. The number of IP addresses sending the web requests has slowly risen since then. At the time this post went live on Ars, it had reached 13.

Spraying the Internet

“We're seeing hits to the specific endpoint that exposes sensitive information, which would be considered exploitation,” Glenn Thorpe, senior director of security research & detection engineering at Greynoise, said in an interview on Mastodon. “At the moment, we've seen 13 IPs that are hitting our unadvertised sensors, which indicates that they are pretty much spraying it across the internet to see what hits.”

Read 11 remaining paragraphs | Comments

[post_excerpt] => Easy-to-exploit flaw can give hackers passwords and cryptographic keys to vulnerable servers. [post_date_gmt] => 2023-11-29 00:38:34 [post_date] => 2023-11-29 00:38:34 [post_modified_gmt] => 2023-11-29 00:38:34 [post_modified] => 2023-11-29 00:38:34 [post_status] => publish [comment_status] => closed [ping_status] => closed [guid] => https://arstechnica.com/?p=1986988 [meta] => Array ( [enclosure] => Array ( [0] => ) [syndication_source] => Ars Technica - All content [syndication_source_uri] => https://arstechnica.com [syndication_source_id] => https://feeds.arstechnica.com/arstechnica/index [rss:comments] => https://arstechnica.com/security/2023/11/owncloud-vulnerability-with-a-maximum-10-severity-rating-comes-under-mass-exploitation/#comments [wfw:commentRSS] => https://arstechnica.com/security/2023/11/owncloud-vulnerability-with-a-maximum-10-severity-rating-comes-under-mass-exploitation/feed/ [syndication_feed] => https://feeds.arstechnica.com/arstechnica/index [syndication_feed_id] => 1 [syndication_permalink] => https://arstechnica.com/?p=1986988 [syndication_item_hash] => 0c9e8f65560bf02269076dbc106c2c21 ) [post_type] => post [post_author] => 15 [tax_input] => Array ( [post_tag] => Array ( [0] => 524 [1] => 905 [2] => 5621 [3] => 19956 [4] => 19957 [5] => 653 [6] => 441 ) [post_format] => Array ( ) [category] => Array ( [0] => 322 [1] => 28 ) ) )

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A Victorian naturalist traded aboriginal remains in a scientific quid pro quo

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Sepia-toned photograph showing seated Victorian gentleman in bowtie

Enlarge / Nineteenth-century naturalist and solicitor Morton Allport, based in Hobart, built a scientific reputation by exchanging the remains of Tasmanian Aboriginal people and Tasmanian tigers for honors from elite societies. (credit: Allport Library and Museum of Fine Arts, State Library of Tasmania)

When Australian naturalist and solicitor Morton Allport died in 1878, one obituary lauded the man as "the most foremost scientist in the colony," as evidenced by his position as vice president of the Royal Society of Tasmania (RST) at the time of his death, among many other international honors. But according to a new paper published in the journal Archives of Natural History, Allport's stellar reputation was based less on his scholarly merit than on his practice of sending valuable specimens of Tasmanian tigers (thylacines) and aboriginal remains to European collectors in exchange for scientific accolades. Allport admits as much in his own letters, preserved in the State Library of Tasmania, as well as to directing grave-robbing efforts to obtain those human remains.

“Early British settlers considered both thylacines and Tasmanian Aboriginal people to be a hindrance to colonial development, and the response was institutionalised violence with the intended goal of eradicating both,” said the paper's author, Jack Ashby, assistant director of the University Museum of Zoology at Cambridge in England. “Allport’s letters show he invested heavily in developing his scientific reputation—particularly in gaining recognition from scientific societies—by supplying human and animal remains from Tasmania in a quid pro quo arrangement, rather than through his own scientific endeavors.”

Thylacines have been extinct since 1936, but they were once the largest marsupial carnivores of the modern era. Europeans first settled in Tasmania in 1803 and viewed the tigers as a threat, blaming the animals for killing their sheep. The settlers didn't view the Aboriginal population much more favorably, and there were inevitable conflicts from the settlers displacing the aborigines and from the increased competition for food.  In 1830, a farming corporation placed the first bounties on thylacines, with the government instituting its own bounty in 1888. (Ashby writes that the true sheep killers were the dogs the settlers bred to hunt kangaroos.).

Read 13 remaining paragraphs | Comments

[post_excerpt] => Morton Allport acquired his specimens through networks and sometimes grave-robbing [post_date_gmt] => 2023-11-29 00:01:55 [post_date] => 2023-11-29 00:01:55 [post_modified_gmt] => 2023-11-29 00:01:55 [post_modified] => 2023-11-29 00:01:55 [post_status] => publish [comment_status] => closed [ping_status] => closed [guid] => https://arstechnica.com/?p=1986689 [meta] => Array ( [enclosure] => Array ( [0] => ) [syndication_source] => Ars Technica - All content [syndication_source_uri] => https://arstechnica.com [syndication_source_id] => https://feeds.arstechnica.com/arstechnica/index [rss:comments] => https://arstechnica.com/science/2023/11/a-victorian-naturalist-traded-aboriginal-remains-in-a-scientific-quid-pro-quo/#comments [wfw:commentRSS] => https://arstechnica.com/science/2023/11/a-victorian-naturalist-traded-aboriginal-remains-in-a-scientific-quid-pro-quo/feed/ [syndication_feed] => https://feeds.arstechnica.com/arstechnica/index [syndication_feed_id] => 1 [syndication_permalink] => https://arstechnica.com/?p=1986689 [syndication_item_hash] => 4cb9bfa3b2f3bafbefcb7cd0f463eae1 ) [post_type] => post [post_author] => 15 [tax_input] => Array ( [post_tag] => Array ( [0] => 534 [1] => 19958 [2] => 3126 [3] => 19959 [4] => 2993 [5] => 19960 [6] => 19961 [7] => 19962 [8] => 19963 [9] => 441 ) [post_format] => Array ( ) [category] => Array ( [0] => 322 [1] => 28 ) ) )

Decide filter: Returning post, everything seems orderly :A Victorian naturalist traded aboriginal remains in a scientific quid pro quo

Array ( [post_title] => A Victorian naturalist traded aboriginal remains in a scientific quid pro quo [post_content] =>

Sepia-toned photograph showing seated Victorian gentleman in bowtie

Enlarge / Nineteenth-century naturalist and solicitor Morton Allport, based in Hobart, built a scientific reputation by exchanging the remains of Tasmanian Aboriginal people and Tasmanian tigers for honors from elite societies. (credit: Allport Library and Museum of Fine Arts, State Library of Tasmania)

When Australian naturalist and solicitor Morton Allport died in 1878, one obituary lauded the man as "the most foremost scientist in the colony," as evidenced by his position as vice president of the Royal Society of Tasmania (RST) at the time of his death, among many other international honors. But according to a new paper published in the journal Archives of Natural History, Allport's stellar reputation was based less on his scholarly merit than on his practice of sending valuable specimens of Tasmanian tigers (thylacines) and aboriginal remains to European collectors in exchange for scientific accolades. Allport admits as much in his own letters, preserved in the State Library of Tasmania, as well as to directing grave-robbing efforts to obtain those human remains.

“Early British settlers considered both thylacines and Tasmanian Aboriginal people to be a hindrance to colonial development, and the response was institutionalised violence with the intended goal of eradicating both,” said the paper's author, Jack Ashby, assistant director of the University Museum of Zoology at Cambridge in England. “Allport’s letters show he invested heavily in developing his scientific reputation—particularly in gaining recognition from scientific societies—by supplying human and animal remains from Tasmania in a quid pro quo arrangement, rather than through his own scientific endeavors.”

Thylacines have been extinct since 1936, but they were once the largest marsupial carnivores of the modern era. Europeans first settled in Tasmania in 1803 and viewed the tigers as a threat, blaming the animals for killing their sheep. The settlers didn't view the Aboriginal population much more favorably, and there were inevitable conflicts from the settlers displacing the aborigines and from the increased competition for food.  In 1830, a farming corporation placed the first bounties on thylacines, with the government instituting its own bounty in 1888. (Ashby writes that the true sheep killers were the dogs the settlers bred to hunt kangaroos.).

Read 13 remaining paragraphs | Comments

[post_excerpt] => Morton Allport acquired his specimens through networks and sometimes grave-robbing [post_date_gmt] => 2023-11-29 00:01:55 [post_date] => 2023-11-29 00:01:55 [post_modified_gmt] => 2023-11-29 00:01:55 [post_modified] => 2023-11-29 00:01:55 [post_status] => publish [comment_status] => closed [ping_status] => closed [guid] => https://arstechnica.com/?p=1986689 [meta] => Array ( [enclosure] => Array ( [0] => ) [syndication_source] => Ars Technica - All content [syndication_source_uri] => https://arstechnica.com [syndication_source_id] => https://feeds.arstechnica.com/arstechnica/index [rss:comments] => https://arstechnica.com/science/2023/11/a-victorian-naturalist-traded-aboriginal-remains-in-a-scientific-quid-pro-quo/#comments [wfw:commentRSS] => https://arstechnica.com/science/2023/11/a-victorian-naturalist-traded-aboriginal-remains-in-a-scientific-quid-pro-quo/feed/ [syndication_feed] => https://feeds.arstechnica.com/arstechnica/index [syndication_feed_id] => 1 [syndication_permalink] => https://arstechnica.com/?p=1986689 [syndication_item_hash] => 4cb9bfa3b2f3bafbefcb7cd0f463eae1 ) [post_type] => post [post_author] => 15 [tax_input] => Array ( [post_tag] => Array ( [0] => 534 [1] => 19958 [2] => 3126 [3] => 19959 [4] => 2993 [5] => 19960 [6] => 19961 [7] => 19962 [8] => 19963 [9] => 441 ) [post_format] => Array ( ) [category] => Array ( [0] => 322 [1] => 28 ) ) )