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ZeroEyes to Deploy AI Object Identification Tech in US Air Force … – The Defense Post

ZeroEyes segment ZE Government Solutions has won a contract to deploy artificial intelligence (AI) anomaly detection technology for US Air Force edge devices such as body cameras.

This approach is expected to improve warfighter security through real-time awareness in situations such as traffic stops and complex missions at international air force bases.

Throughout my military career, I had to enter countless dangerous situations with minimal information about my surroundings, ZeroEyes Co-founder and CEO Mike Lahiff explained.

By deploying our AI-based object detection on edge devices, we will be able to provide situational awareness and an added layer of security to the brave men and women dedicated to protecting our country.

The contract supports a joint program by the US Air Force Research Laboratory and its Technology Directorate (AFWERX) to investigate the potential interoperability between AI and networked equipment that will fill capability gaps across the service.A computer image demonstrates new artificial intelligence software designed to detect and alert the presence of firearms. Photo: US Air Force

In September 2022, AFWERX contracted ZeroEyes to supply AI gun detection solutions for aerial drones stationed at the Dover Air Force Base in Delaware.

The $1.25-million award enabled unmanned systems to detect handheld weapons for base protection.

Under the contract, the companys technology was programmed with machine learning software and internet security cameras that identify the gun before the first shot is fired within three to five seconds.

Screenshots and related data from the AI solution are sent to a control facility to confirm the weapon and trigger the drone to employ response and interference protocols.

The platform was trialed against rifles, shotguns, and other weapon systems before the award to confirm its operability.

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Byron Bay woman’s Paypal data breach nightmare exposes risks of ‘credential stuffing’. So how do you avoid it? – ABC News

A cyber security researchersays reusing passwords is like creating a skeleton keyhackers can use to hijack accounts through a process known as credential stuffing.

The form of online fraud resulted in a Byron Bay woman being ordered to pay more than a million dollars in damages to Adidas and the National Basketball Association (NBA) in America after her PayPal account was hacked.

Sarah Luke said the hackers took control of her account, in an attack that affected 35,000 PayPal customers in December.

Credential stuffing involves hackers accessing an account by using automation to try out username and password pairs sourced from data leaks on various websites.

Troy Hunt is a cyber security expert and creator of website Have I Been Pwned, which collects information ondata breaches and helps people establish if they've been caught up in them.

Hesaid most people's digital footprint was so largeit was hard to identify where data breaches originated.

"The thing most people don't realise is that we have all been in data breaches that not only we don't know about, but the organisations that have been breachedprobably don't know about," he said.

"If you think you have less than 100 accounts, and you've been on the internet for more than about 10 years, you're probably wrong."

Professor of Cyber Security Practice at Edith Cowan University,Paul Haskell-Dowlandtold ABC NSW Drive thatwhile Ms Luke's case was "extreme", it was common for "personal information to be stolen or leaked and misused by criminals".

"Given the global situation, we're certainly seeing a continued interest from cyber criminals in obtaining or stealing data in relation to what we might think are relatively mundane pieces of our lives," Professor Haskell-Dowland said.

"Scams alone are now costingAustralians billions of dollars every year and, when you look across the globe, the sums are in the order of trillions of dollars of economic damage or direct losses."

Ms Luke has said she was only aware of being affected by the October 2022 Medibank data breach.

But Medibank said none of its customers' passwordswere compromised in the breach.

Mr Hunt said it was possible for hackers to "socially engineer"their way into something like a PayPal account.

But he said without a password, it would have required the hackers convincing the service that they were the victim before it handed them control of an account.

Mr Hunt said the other way hackers could have accessed Ms Luke's PayPal account was through an unknown data breach or breaches.

"Very often we see other data breaches, which do leak passwords," he said.

"And due to the prevalence of password reuse, you could go to those data breaches as an attacker, take the passwords and log into someone's account."

Mr Hunt said personal data like usernames and passwords was now "so prevalent" online it existed not just on the dark web, but also on the clear web, traded in public forums and posted to social media accounts.

"It's just amazing how far our email address and password pairs travel in credential stuffing lists," he said.

"Trying to remove your data from the internet is like trying to remove pee from a pool.

"It is very hard to actually get that information back offline."

Credential stuffing relies on people re-using passwords, Mr Hunt said.

A good way to avoid it, he said, was to use a secure password manager that generatedunique and strong passwords for each online account.

"When you have a unique password for each and every site, that kills credential stuffing dead in its tracks," he said.

Mr Hunt said the first step was to get a digital password manager and start with the most important accounts first, such as email.

"Your email account is enormously valuable, because that's used very often to reset the passwords for your other accounts," he said.

Mr Hunt said it was "never too late" for people to make their online accounts harder to hack.

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Byron Bay woman's Paypal data breach nightmare exposes risks of 'credential stuffing'. So how do you avoid it? - ABC News

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Who and What is Behind the Malware Proxy Service SocksEscort … – Krebs on Security

Researchers this month uncovered a two-year-old Linux-based remote access trojan dubbed AVrecon that enslaves Internet routers into botnet that bilks online advertisers and performs password-spraying attacks. Now new findings reveal that AVrecon is the malware engine behind a 12-year-old service called SocksEscort, which rents hacked residential and small business devices to cybercriminals looking to hide their true location online.

Image: Lumens Black Lotus Labs.

In a report released July 12, researchers at Lumens Black Lotus Labs called the AVrecon botnet one of the largest botnets targeting small-office/home-office (SOHO) routers seen in recent history, and a crime machine that has largely evaded public attention since first being spotted in mid-2021.

The malware has been used to create residential proxy services to shroud malicious activity such as password spraying, web-traffic proxying and ad fraud, the Lumen researchers wrote.

Malware-based anonymity networks are a major source of unwanted and malicious web traffic directed at online retailers, Internet service providers (ISPs), social networks, email providers and financial institutions. And a great many of these proxy networks are marketed primarily to cybercriminals seeking to anonymize their traffic by routing it through an infected PC, router or mobile device.

Proxy services can be used in a legitimate manner for several business purposes such as price comparisons or sales intelligence but they are massively abused for hiding cybercrime activity because they make it difficult to trace malicious traffic to its original source. Proxy services also let users appear to be getting online from nearly anywhere in the world, which is useful if youre a cybercriminal who is trying to impersonate someone from a specific place.

Spur.us, a startup that tracks proxy services, told KrebsOnSecurity that the Internet addresses Lumen tagged as the AVrecon botnets Command and Control (C2) servers all tie back to a long-running proxy service called SocksEscort.

SocksEscort[.]com, is whats known as a SOCKS Proxy service. The SOCKS (or SOCKS5) protocol allows Internet users to channel their Web traffic through a proxy server, which then passes the information on to the intended destination. From a websites perspective, the traffic of the proxy network customer appears to originate from a rented/malware-infected PC tied to a residential ISP customer, not from the proxy service customer.

The SocksEscort home page says its services are perfect for people involved in automated online activity that often results in IP addresses getting blocked or banned, such as Craigslist and dating scams, search engine results manipulation, and online surveys.

Spur tracks SocksEscort as a malware-based proxy offering, which means the machines doing the proxying of traffic for SocksEscort customers have been infected with malicious software that turns them into a traffic relay. Usually, these users have no idea their systems are compromised.

Spur says the SocksEscort proxy service requires customers to install a Windows based application in order to access a pool of more than 10,000 hacked devices worldwide.

We created a fingerprint to identify the call-back infrastructure for SocksEscort proxies, Spur co-founder Riley Kilmer said. Looking at network telemetry, we were able to confirm that we saw victims talking back to it on various ports.

According to Kilmer, AVrecon is the malware that gives SocksEscort its proxies.

When Lumen released their report and IOCs [indicators of compromise], we queried our system for which proxy service call-back infrastructure overlapped with their IOCs, Kilmer continued. The second stage C2s they identified were the same as the IPs we labeled for SocksEscort.

Lumens research team said the purpose of AVrecon appears to be stealing bandwidth without impacting end-users in order to create a residential proxy service to help launder malicious activity and avoid attracting the same level of attention from Tor-hidden services or commercially available VPN services.

This class of cybercrime activity threat may evade detection because it is less likely than a crypto-miner to be noticed by the owner, and it is unlikely to warrant the volume of abuse complaints that internet-wide brute-forcing and DDoS-based botnets typically draw, Lumens Black Lotus researchers wrote.

Preserving bandwidth for both customers and victims was a primary concern for SocksEscort in July 2022, when 911S5 at the time the worlds largest known malware proxy network got hacked and imploded just days after being exposed in a story here. Kilmer said after 911s demise, SocksEscort closed its registration for several months to prevent an influx of new users from swamping the service.

Danny Adamitis, principal information security researcher at Lumen and co-author of the report on AVrecon, confirmed Kilmers findings, saying the C2 data matched up with what Spur was seeing for SocksEscort dating back to September 2022.

Adamitis said that on July 13 the day after Lumen published research on AVrecon and started blocking any traffic to the malwares control servers the people responsible for maintaining the botnet reacted quickly to transition infected systems over to a new command and control infrastructure.

They were clearly reacting and trying to maintain control over components of the botnet, Adamitis said. Probably, they wanted to keep that revenue stream going.

Frustratingly, Lumen was not able to determine how the SOHO devices were being infected with AVrecon. Some possible avenues of infection include exploiting weak or default administrative credentials on routers, and outdated, insecure firmware that has known, exploitable security vulnerabilities.

KrebsOnSecurity briefly visited SocksEscort last year and promised a follow-up on the history and possible identity of its proprietors. A review of the earliest posts about this service on Russian cybercrime forums suggests the 12-year-old malware proxy network is tied to a Moldovan company that also offers VPN software on the Apple Store and elsewhere.

SocksEscort began in 2009 as super-socks[.]com, a Russian-language service that sold access to thousands of compromised PCs that could be used to proxy traffic. Someone who picked the nicknames SSC and super-socks and email address michvatt@gmail.com registered on multiple cybercrime forums and began promoting the proxy service.

According to DomainTools.com, the apparently related email address michdomain@gmail.com was used to register SocksEscort[.]com, super-socks[.]com, and a few other proxy-related domains, including ip-score[.]com, segate[.]org seproxysoft[.]com, and vipssc[.]us. Cached versions of both super-socks[.]com and vipssc[.]us show these sites sold the same proxy service, and both displayed the letters SSC prominently at the top of their homepages.

Image: Archive.org. Page translation from Russian via Google Translate.

According to cyber intelligence firm Intel 471, the very first SSC identity registered on the cybercrime forums happened in 2009 at the Russian language hacker community Antichat, where SSC registered using the email address adriman@gmail.com. SSC asked fellow forum members for help in testing the security of a website they claimed was theirs: myiptest[.]com, which promised to tell visitors whether their proxy address was included on any security or anti-spam block lists.

DomainTools says myiptest[.]com was registered in 2008 to an Adrian Crismaru from Chisinau, Moldova. Myiptest[.]com is no longer responding, but a cached copy of it from Archive.org shows that for about four years it included in its HTML source a Google Analytics code of US-2665744, which was also present on more than a dozen other websites.

Most of the sites that once bore that Google tracking code are no longer online, but nearly all of them centered around services that were similar to myiptest[.]com, such as abuseipdb[.]com, bestiptest[.]com, checkdnslbl[.]com, dnsbltools[.]com and dnsblmonitor[.]com.

Each of these services were designed to help visitors quickly determine whether the Internet address they were visiting the site from was listed by any security firms as spammy, malicious or phishous. In other words, these services were designed so that proxy service users could easily tell if their rented Internet address was still safe to use for online fraud.

Another domain with the Google Analytics code US-2665744 was sscompany[.]net. An archived copy of the site says SSC stands for Server Support Company, which advertised outsourced solutions for technical support and server administration. The company was located in Chisinau, Moldova and owned by Adrian Crismaru.

Leaked copies of the hacked Antichat forum indicate the SSC identity tied to adriman@gmail.com registered on the forum using the IP address 71.229.207.214. That same IP was used to register the nickname Deem3n, a prolific poster on Antichat between 2005 and 2009 who served as a moderator on the forum.

There was a Deem3nuser on the webmaster forum Searchengines.guru whose signature in their posts says they run a popular community catering to programmers in Moldova called sysadmin[.]md, and that they were a systems administrator for sscompany[.]net.

That same Google Analytics code is also now present on the homepages of wiremo[.]co and a VPN provider called HideIPVPN[.]com.

Wiremo sells software and services to help website owners better manage their customer reviews. Wiremos Contact Us page lists a Server Management LLC in Wilmington, DE as the parent company. Records from the Delaware Secretary of State indicate Crismaru is CEO of this company.

Server Management LLC is currently listed in Apples App Store as the owner of a free VPN app called HideIPVPN. The contact information on Crismarus LinkedIn page says his company websites include myiptest[.]com, sscompany[.]net, and hideipvpn[.]com.

The best way to secure the transmissions of your mobile device is VPN, reads HideIPVPNs description on the Apple Store. Now, we provide you with an even easier way to connect to our VPN servers. We will hide your IP address, encrypt all your traffic, secure all your sensitive information (passwords, mail credit card details, etc.) form [sic] hackers on public networks.

Mr. Crismaru did not respond to multiple requests for comment. When asked about the companys apparent connection to SocksEscort, Wiremo responded, We do not control this domain and no one from our team is connected to this domain. Wiremo did not respond when presented with the findings in this report.

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Jordan Peterson Mocked for Responding to Satirical ‘Snow White’ Story – Newsweek

Jordan Peterson appears to have fallen for an internet prank, and social media users have been merciless in their response.

The Canadian psychologist has a strong presence online, with millions of followers across various social media sites.His opinions often stir up conversation and go viral, prompting reactions from across the political spectrum. The latest social media fodder has been his response to a tweet from the satirical conservative website The Babylon Bee, launched in 2016.

Disney is rebooting the Snow White story with a new live-action remake, starring actress Rachel Zegler, an actress of Colombian and Polish descent. The casting received backlash when it was announced in 2021, but new details have also been slammed by online users. In the 2024 version of Snow White, the "seven dwarfs" will be played by one actor with dwarfism and six others of varying genders and ethnicities.

The Babylon Bee added to the outrage with a joke about the plotline of Snow White, which Peterson appeared to take seriously.

"Disney to remove problematic kiss from classic movie, Snow White will now remain dead," The Babylon Bee tweeted, joking that the prince from the 1812 German fairy tale won't kiss a dead Snow White in the new version, which is supposed to bring her back to life.

Peterson took the bait. "Looks like @Disney can't stop chasing failure," he wrote on Twitter on Monday. While some social media users were fooled too, others jumped on to mock Peterson.

Peterson has been a vocal opponent of Disney in recent times, as the company publicly opposed the "Don't Say Gay Bill" in Florida, got into a war of words with Florida Governor Ron DeSantis, and was seen to promote LGBTQ+ representation in their movies.

"You know this is satire right?" Asked @TheWickedZen while @henryfalk said, "This is a joke, not real news."

Others asked if Peterson knew what The Babylon Bee is, while others were quick to defend Peterson suggesting he knows exactly what the site is and that he knows what he's doing.

Another user, @TheOneChaaluna, said while the story may not be true now, it could manifest later. "This is from a parody account, so it's not actually true...it could become true later though. BB is pretty good at predicting the future!"

White it's comedy has been branded as dangerous right-wing misinformation, The Babylon Bee owner Seth Dillon told Newsweek in February 2023 that mocking woke people is the site's "moral purpose." At that point, Dillon had 85 examples of faux stories created by the publication, which allegedly turned out true in some form.

As mentioned, Peterson is regularly outspoken on social media, often receiving backlash for his statements. In recent months, he has blasted Ben & Jerry's ice cream for having a "Budweiser moment" over their Fourth of July message. He was slammed online for tweeting earlier that "trans women are men."

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Saudis aware of cyber risks as 97% of respondents take security … – Arab News

RIYADH: Internet users in Saudi Arabia are becoming more conscious of cyber risks as 97 percent ofrespondentsin a recent pollsaid thattheytake extensive measures to protect the security of their home connections.

According to a survey conducted byglobaltechnology firm Cisco,as many as 91 percent of respondents ranked broadband as critical national infrastructure, while 68 percent said they rely on their homeinternet to work from home or run a business.

Ciscos Broadband Survey,which wasconducted withover 21,000 people across 12 countries, included2,000 respondents from the Kingdom.

Our survey has confirmed that consumers in Saudi Arabia are increasingly prioritizing cybersecurity when using their broadband service, and this is aligned with the results of our previous study that revealed that 73 percent of consumers in the Kingdom worry about cybercriminals hacking their devices,said Salman Faqeeh, managingdirector at Cisco Saudi Arabia.

With the prevalence of hybrid work models and the evolution and complexity of cyberattacks,he said theusage of sophisticated means for protection like multi-factor authenticationhas becomemore important than ever.

Passwordscontinueto bethe mostpopular wayto combat cyber risks as 52 percent of the survey respondents in Saudi Arabiasaid theyuse them to protect their home networks and devices.

As manyas 28 percent of respondents in the Kingdomsaid theyswitch on their routersfirewall, which poses a security barrier between the internet and ones home network.

According to the survey, up to 38 percent of consumers ranked security as a top priority when choosing their broadband package, even though speedremainsone of the main preferences.

In addition to this, an estimated 76 percent of consumers in the Kingdom expressed that they feel more secure while using the cloud.Earlier this month, the Saudi Ministry of Commerce released its summary bulletin which showed that internet security is gaining prominence in the Kingdom as an increasing number of cybersecurity firmsare seekingregistrationto engage in commercial activities.

According to the summary bulletin, the number of cybersecurity firms registered in Saudi Arabia grew by 52 percent to reach 2,229 in the second quarter of 2023, up from 1,462 in the year-ago period.

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When hell freezes over: Inside the Ontario court battle over Jordan Petersons tweets – Toronto Star

His lawyers call Toronto psychologist and bestselling author Jordan Peterson a colourful and controversial online provocateur whose YouTube videos and tweets are liked by millions.

Petersons detractors see him as a showboater who uses controversy to make money, espouses anti-feminist and anti-trans views and spreads misinformation about areas he knows little about; his climate change commentary on a podcast last year was derided by scientists as stunningly ignorant.

But before rocketing to worldwide fame, Peterson was just like thousands of other clinical psychologists in Toronto he taught university courses and treated clients with behavioural and mental conditions and was a registered member of the College of Psychologists of Ontario in good standing, with no public record of any complaints.

Since then, complaints to the Toronto-based college have multiplied, many from individuals with no clinical, professional or personal relationship with Peterson but who are offended by things theyve read or heard him say online, in podcasts and in interviews.

Following the publication of his 2018 book The 12 Rules for Life, Peterson gained a reputation as a guru for male self-improvement, winning fans especially within so-called mens rights communities. Its a reputation hes cultivated with a YouTube channel and combative Twitter account where he has warned of a crisis of masculinity and railed against political correctness in terms critics have slammed as hateful, leading the platform to ban his account in a high-profile decision. (It was later overturned by Twitter owner Elon Musk.)

Around the same time as the Twitter ban, in 2021 and 2022, a series of complainants to the college took exception to Petersons comments directed at politicians, a transgender actor and a plus-sized model, leading to an investigation by the colleges complaints committee. Some complaints were related to comments about climate change he made on an appearance on Joe Rogans podcast, Rogan himself being no stranger to controversy.

The committee concluded the overall effect of Petersons controversial public statements could constitute professional misconduct and ordered him to undergo a social media re-education or coaching program. The failure to do so could result in the loss of his psychologist licence.

When hell freezes over, Peterson responded in a tweet last fall about the likelihood of him receiving such training.

Peterson is now seeking a judicial review of the panels November 2022 decision, taking the case to Ontarios Divisional Court.

Jordan Peterson v. the College of Psychologists of Ontario is being watched by free speech advocates and regulators from other professions.

The decision by the panel of three Superior Court judges could have a broad and possibly chilling effect on all regulated professionals, warned Jonah Arnold, a lawyer for the newly created Association of Aggrieved Regulated Professionals of Ontario, one of several groups granted intervener status at the June hearing. Arnold said he co-founded the organization in January after realizing many clients were unjustly forced to leave their respective professions and had no voice, he wrote in an email to the Star.

A decision to uphold the colleges decision could deter people from joining regulated professions in Ontario, including teaching, medicine, or the law, if it emboldens regulators to police the expression of non-professional opinions and beliefs, Arnold argued during the daylong hearing at Osgoode Hall. (One of the judges on the panel called that speculation.)

Other interveners included the Canadian Civil Liberties Association its lawyers argued that regulatory oversight doesnt extend to expressive activity that is outside the scope of professional practice and the College of Physicians and Surgeons of Ontario, which like the other interveners, took no position on the outcome of the case, but noted health regulators have an overarching duty to act in the public interest.

That includes setting standards for civility in communications in public forums, and ensuring communications are free from discrimination and consistent with core values of the profession, CPSO lawyers Carolyn Silver and Amy Block wrote in their submission.

Lawyer John McIntyre, representing Egale Canada and JusticeTrans, argued a health professionals right to freedom of expression is not unfettered. It must be weighed against countervailing interests, including the Charter rights of vulnerable and marginalized stakeholders. (Petersons lawyers note the colleges decision did not find his comments were transphobic or discriminatory.)

Peterson, meanwhile, was a no-show at the June court proceeding.

Born and raised in Alberta, he joined the University of Torontos Department of Psychology in 1997. He resigned as a full-time professor in 2021 but remains a professor emeritus. He has been registered as a psychologist with the college since 1999 and continues to be a member despite stopping his clinical practice in June 2017.

Peterson, who just turned 61, came to broader public attention in 2016 after releasing a YouTube series called Professor Against Political Correctness. In it, he criticized the federal government for amending the Canadian Human Rights Act to include gender identity and expression and railed against gender-neutral pronouns.

His 2018 self-help book 12 Rules for Life gave readers straightforward advice, like to stand up straight with your shoulders back and make friends with people who want the best for you. It sold 10 million copies worldwide; a follow-up sold five million. Meanwhile, Peterson continues to promote himself on his YouTube channel, Twitter posts, speaking tours and in interviews with print, TV and online media outlets.

People whove taken offence to some of his statements or views have complained through the colleges formal complaints system or by posting their disdain on Twitter and tagging the regulator. Some purport to be colleagues. Embarrassed to be in the same college as him, one anonymous psychologist told a college staff member over the phone last year. The call takers note is included in a 736-page Divisional Court file.

If I did one-tenth of the stuff he is doing people would be all over me, the caller said.

Its up to the colleges complaints committee to decide whether a full hearing is necessary after complaints are made, or whether it would be appropriate and in the public interest to resolve the matter some other way. The college currently has 4,868 members and in 2021-22 it opened just six registrar investigations, confirmed Tony DeBono, the colleges registrar and executive director.

In Petersons case, a panel found in November 2022 that his comments were degrading, demeaning and unprofessional. After an offer to resolve things through remediation failed, the panel ordered him to take complete a remedial or coaching program. Typically, such decisions are not made public, but Peterson posted his online; they now form part of the court record, as does a September 2022 letter from Peterson to the college. In it, where Peterson responded to the criticism, noting he has already implemented a solution to the problem of monitoring and modifying his social media communication with guidance from a team of experts.

I have consciously and carefully surrounded myself with people who have helped me monitor what I am doing and who provide me with continual feedback as to the appropriateness of the tone and the content of what I am purveying, Peterson wrote. The vetting team comprises a very wide network of expert thinkers and includes a set of messengers and strategists on the liberal left (for the Democrats) who have tried assiduously to pull that party toward the moderate middle for more than five years, and have produced billions of dollars of advertising on that front, and our conversations have been strenuous and difficult and careful in the extreme, as we have attempted to negotiate our way forward in peace, mutual understanding and tranquillity.

In ordering Peterson to accept remedial coaching, the panel cited the following public statements as problematic:

In the November 2022 decision, the panel wrote it is concerned that making public statements that may be inconsistent with the professional standards, policies, and ethics currently adopted by the college poses moderate risks of harm to the public.

Those potential harms include undermining public trust in the profession of psychology, and trust in the Colleges ability to regulate the profession in the public interest.

Petersons lawyers argued this ruling conflicted with a prior review of Petersons similar conduct.

In 2020, an earlier panel responded to a complaint that some of Petersons comments on Twitter were transphobic, sexist, racist, and not in keeping with clinically accepted understanding of psychological concepts, according to the decision that cited numerous examples.

Peterson asked the college to dismiss the complaint because it was frivolous and vexatious, and he was not a practising clinical psychologist.

An investigation was conducted and that panel concluded that while some of his statements are considered controversial and unpopular, objections to his political commentary does not serve as evidence that he has engaged in disgraceful, dishonourable, or unprofessional behaviour. However, the panel added it had concerns that the manner and tone in which Dr. Peterson espouses his public statements may reflect poorly on the profession of psychology.

The panel, this time, decided it would be in the public interest to advise Peterson to offer his opinions and comments in a respectful tone in order to avoid a negative perception toward the profession of psychology, the March 2020 ruling said.

The Divisional Court could release its decision at any time.

Betsy Powell is a Toronto-based reporter covering crime and courts for the Star. Follow her on Twitter: @powellbetsy

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Bill Maher and Jordan Peterson expose how ‘wokeness’ ‘undoes’ liberalism – Washington Examiner

Comedian Bill Maher and clinical psychologist Dr. Jordan Peterson dove deep into the notion that wokeness is killing classic liberalism.

"The theme I've been trying to promulgate as much as I can the last five years, partly just in self-defense of people who say I've changed, I have not, is that wokeness is not something that expands on liberalism. It's something that undoes it," Maher told Peterson on an episode of the Club Random Podcast.

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Color blindness is a prime example, according to Maher.

"Wanting to have a color-blind society where we don't see race is classic liberalism, certainly what Obama was going for," according to Maher. "That's not wokeism.

"Wokesim is race is front and center to everything."

Peterson agreed and expanded on Maher's idea.

"To me, that's an extension of the insistence that someone's primary identity is signified by their group, for whatever reason," he said.

That idea is what "old-school" liberals were fighting against, Maher said.

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"Don't characterize somebody by that," the comedian said.

"So, they [the Left] inverted, and then they get mad at us for somehow, we're conservatives now? No, we're not conservatives. You're just not what liberals are," he added, referring to "woke" culture. "You're doing a different thing, which is fine. We're all allowed to do our thing, but you can't do this different thing and then take the term that used to apply but doesn't apply anymore."

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Bill Maher and Jordan Peterson expose how 'wokeness' 'undoes' liberalism - Washington Examiner

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Implementing zero trust with the Internet of Things (IoT) – ITPro

Taking a zero-trust approach to security is pretty much the standard by which organizations are measured these days. It means no user can be on the network without being authenticated and continuously validated.

We think of users as people. But users can also be things. And these internet-facing things Internet of Things (IoT) devices can be as much of a cyber security issue as people. Actually, they can be more of a security issue.

Organizations rely on IoT devices to help them keep operational on a day-to-day basis. There are plenty of devices that keep a business running including security cameras, printers, smart TVs, conference room equipment, kitchen equipment, and environmental sensors. These might include thermostats, smoke detectors, and ventilation systems alongside smart locks and room entry management systems.

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The UK's IoT proposals are riddled with 'astonishing' gaps

All of these use software to complete tasks and share data with other devices, inside or outside the network. Their communication is typically automated, machine to machine, and doesnt involve a human. It may never be monitored in any way thats meaningful in a security-conscious sense.

Normally, wed consider many of these devices as the domain of the facilities team rather than the IT team, and outside the scope of the enterprise network that needs protecting. Its one of the many considerations when it comes to assessing IoT security risks.

Consider older facilities, says Abel Archundia, managing director, of global advisory and life sciences at ISTARTI. They may create or manage sensitive data yet likely have air conditioning units or cameras installed years ago in the same network. And most of these systems have no protocol to upgrade operating systems in IoT devices. The worst thing is that theyre not very complex or hard to crack.

Each of the devices attached to an organizations network presents a danger, John Linford, Security & OTTF Forum Director at the Open Group explains.

Devices inevitably have vulnerabilities through their connection to a network, he tells ITPro. With the growing use of IoT devices, a businesss attack surface expands as attacks can originate from the channels that connect IoT devices.

Its a key problem that poor security is a feature of many of these IoT devices right from the outset and they dont have to be particularly old to feature poor security. Right out of the box, they can come with default passwords that arent changed on installation, and can have a poor level of commitment to firmware updating and patching. They either lack a regular schedule, a commitment to patch whenever a fault is found or have a short period of support before dropping out of the support regime completely.

[An IoT device can] lack support for modern, secure controls like two-factor authentication (2FA), and logging and monitoring of device access and network traffic, Matt Lewis, commercial research director at NCC Group, tells ITPro.

They often lack an interface such as a screen to provide notifications about possible new software updates. And they are regularly overlooked as they appear as black boxes performing a function and are presumed to be fine if operational.

For many IoT devices, updating their firmware can require physical access, which can be difficult for say IP cameras mounted high on fences or gates.

Theres a strongly held view that it simply isnt possible to trust any IoT device, even if its equipped with automatic security updating. As a former CIO, my guidance is that preparation is the best defense, Archundia tells ITPro.

IoT devices are often just too much of a risk; theyre too much of a soft entry point into the organization to overlook them. Its best to assume each device is a hole in an enterprises defenses. Perhaps each device wont be a hole at all times, but some may be for at least some of the times. So long as the hole isnt plugged, it can be found and exploited.

Thats actually fine in a zero trust environment, because it assumes every single act, by a human or a device, could be malicious. The system, therefore, monitors and checks everything on the basis that a successful attack is always a possibility.

Linford adds its possible to limit the scope of an attack administered through IoT in a zero trust environment. Because zero trust focuses on continuously verifying and placing security as close to each asset as possible, a cyber attack need not have far-reaching consequences in the organization, he says. By relying on techniques such as secured zones, the organization can effectively limit the blast radius of an attack, ensuring that a successful attack will have limited benefits for the threat agent.

Still, the devices themselves merit plenty of attention on an individual basis. Lewis advocates a robust asset management process in which organizations take steps to track every single asset as much as possible. [This includes] subscribing to notifications from all of their tech vendors about any new software updates, and ensuring a documented process is followed to install any updates or security fixes in a timely manner. This should all be done as a periodic routine, rather than say a once a year activity.

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Implementing zero trust with the Internet of Things (IoT) - ITPro

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Why I’m sceptical about a superconductor breakthrough – The Spectator

A team of South Korean scientists has pre-printed a paper asserting that they have achieved superconductivity at room temperature and atmospheric pressure. The paper has led to widespread speculation that this is the most significant physics discovery in decades, with huge implications for energy, medical technology and computing. Even Jordan Peterson is asking if room-temperature superconductivity has become a reality.

If the paper is true, it is indeed big news.

The authors of this latest paper are not hiding the light of their excitement under any bushels of modesty

But there are widespread doubts as to whether it will prove true. The paper comes from an unknown team at a start-up institute with little track record in the field, it has not been peer reviewed and its charts are frankly a mess. So the betting is it will prove to be just a familiar hype-and-disappoint cycle of the kind that plagues the field of energy physics.

But there are good reasons to think that the phenomenon itself might be possible one day; that its not a physical impossibility.

Superconductors do exist: they can carry electrical currents without resistance, generating no heat and experiencing no losses. Heike Kamerlingh Onnes got the Nobel prize 110 years ago for discovering that if you plonk some mercury in liquid helium, at minus 269C, it loses all resistance to electrical current.

But given how difficult it is to make liquid helium, and to maintain such low temperatures, this remained a curiosity of little practical use. Then in 1986 scientists at IBM found that certain oxides could superconduct at higher temperatures. An oxide of three metals, yttrium-barium-copper, superconducted at a balmy minus 170C, above the temperature of liquid nitrogen, a much cheaper refrigerant to make. That made it useful in big magnets, for instance in scanners.

Then in the past decade hydrogen sulphide and lanthanum hydride proved to be superconductors at even higher temperatures, but only at immensely high pressures, equivalent to more than a million and a half times atmospheric pressure. Again, interesting but impractical. A still warmer, high-pressure result announced in 2020 has since been retracted.

Now comes a claim of superconductivity at ambient temperatures and pressures. If its true and if the material, which is made of lead, copper and oxygen, is reliable and cheap to make very big ifs in this field then suddenly storing and transmitting electricity would become much cheaper and more efficient. Power stations would no longer need to match output to demand but could store electricity away in cheap batteries as if it were a pile of potatoes.

Ever since the cold-fusion fiasco of the late 1980s, when it was incorrectly claimed that nuclear fusion could take place at room temperature, I have taken announcements that a new energy technology can suddenly solve all our problems with pinches of salt. I have lost count of the number of times I have been urged to believe in the almost magical properties of new fuel cells, tethered solar panels in space or some new physics that will abolish the energy conundrum once and for all.

The authors of this latest paper are not hiding the light of their excitement under any bushels of modesty: We believe that our new development will be a brand-new historical event that opens a new era for humankind.

then subscribe from as little as 1 a week after that

Hmm. Remember the projector that Gulliver met at the Grand Academy of Lagado, Jonathan Swifts satire on the Royal Society: He had been eight years upon a project for extracting sunbeams out of cucumbers, which were to be put in vials hermetically sealed, and let out to warm the air in raw inclement summers. He told me, he did not doubt in eight years more, that he should be able to supply the Governors gardens with sunshine at a reasonable rate; but he complained that his stock was low.

Heres what a superconductivity expert, Professor Jorge Hirsch at University of California at San Diego said today about the new paper: Its not superconductivity. Its experimental artifacts, wishful thinking and poor judgment (in the best scenario). Experts can be wrong of course, but I am not betting on it.

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Why I'm sceptical about a superconductor breakthrough - The Spectator

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Danielle Smith is bucking right-wing trends on LGBTQ issues – CBC.ca

Calgary Analysis

Jason Markusoff - CBC News

Posted: July 21, 2023 Last Updated: July 21, 2023

When a guy in a green "straight pride" shirt was photographed with a Stampede-going Premier Danielle Smith, Albertans saw in it whatever they wanted to see.

Detractors of Smith and the grinning dude's shirt found the message disparagingly dismissive of the struggles that have necessitated the LGBTQ movement, and saw a premier potentially dog-whistling her support of that dismissiveness.

Supporters of the shirt's message, at least found nothing wrong with the shirt, or of being proud of heterosexuality. Then, they howled upon seeing a premier they generally backed state she supports the LGBTQ community, hadn't read the guy's shirt and "obviously doesn't agree with its message." An apology, of sorts.

Emblematic of the online backlash she faced on that side was the wearer of the shirt himself: "I'm pretty sad that she caved," the fellow told a YouTube interviewer the following week.

(joncluett/Twitter)

Where he was being interviewed is instructive: at a rally dubbed "Leave Our Kids Alone," for Calgarians opposed to teaching about LGBTQ in schools and gender transitioning services for youth. A rally speaker praised the "straight pride" guy and criticized the premier's statement distancing herself from that shirt's message, even if the speaker professed "love" for Smith and urged others to give her a chance.

This may be a fringe protest, but it's part of a wider movement in international right-wing circles, the likes of which Premier Smith normally travels in.

There's a rising tide of both right-wingactivism and political policy specifically against transgender rights and opportunities for youth to receive gender-affirming care or be protected from discrimination. It spans from Jordan Peterson podcasts and many in the freedom convoy movement, to anti-trans bills in several Republican states like Florida and South Carolina, as well as a contentious policy in New Brunswick.

Right-wing online influencers, convoy protestors, Republican governors and conservative premiers these are the figures she celebrates and the crowds she aligns herself with on many issues.

She was fully with them in the fight against COVID rules and vaccination mandates. But where this movement shifted toward divisive action and heightened rhetoric on LGBTQ and particularly trans issues, Smith has taken the off-ramp.

She doesn't fit into critics' right-wing caricature on this score.

Whether this is due to political pragmatism, personal relationships, her own live-and-let-live libertarian ideology or, likely, a complex mixture of factors she just isn't going to the polarizing place so many like-minded figures in politics have gone.

On the flip side, however, her government hasn't done or promised much to enhance protections to the communities, or rolled back past policy reforms the United Conservative Party brought in under Jason Kenney. The only discernible action Smith has taken was keeping LacombePonoka MLA Jennifer Johnson out of her party caucus after it was revealed that as a candidate she had publicly compared trans kids to feces in food.

But this lack of action also serves as a resistance of sorts to what's happening elsewhere in parts ofconservative North America compared to Premier Blaine Higgs's contentious reforms to student pronoun policy in New Brunswick schools, or the ban on gender-affirming care for minors and the "Don't Say Gay" law on classroom instruction in Florida, whose Gov. Ron DeSantis the Alberta premier has lionized.

In fact, when Smith has been invited or virtually goaded to delve into more provocative rhetoric on transgender issues, she's outright refused.

Last August, when an Alberta separatist group co-sponsored theUCP leadership race to replace Kenney, its moderator asked about teaching gender diversity, surgery and trans athletes. Two rivals, Brian Jean and Todd Loewen, were more forceful and drew more applause for their firmer answers on school policy and rigidly biological gender rules in sport. Smith was far more equivocal, and even pushed back on the question.

"I have a non-binary family member, and I believe these decisions are very personal, and it should not be debated in public," Smith said. "We shouldn't be making any child feel like the issues they're struggling with are something that's a political football."

Smith did suggest some consideration about who's allowed to play in women's sports, but it was cautious enough that Jean later swiped at her in a fundraising letter: "Danielle Smith was the only candidate in attendance who said biological men should be allowed to participate in women's sports in some instances."

Weeks after becoming premier last fall, Smith did a podcast interview with Peterson, the social critic who became famous for opposing preferential gender pronounsand perennially rails on trans issues.

After the psychologist's lengthy question about identity politics and societal family norms, Smith stressed the importance of conservatives making the coalition broad and welcoming. She praised the wide public acceptance of same-sex marriage and parenthood, as well as the number of gay conservative staffers.

"We actually have a transgender woman who heads up our chief firearms office in Alberta," Smith told Peterson.

"I'm very proud of the conservative movement and how inclusive it is and I want to make sure we remain that inclusive," she said to the interviewer, who has a history of being at odds with that concept.

At a Medicine Hat forum during May's provincial election, Smith continued along this vein, bemoaning "10 years of polarization" on LGBTQ issues, and stressed that adults should be "supportive" of kids as they struggle with their identity and sexuality.

She added that her chief of staff is gay, and highlighted that one premier's office communications staffer does double duty as outreach officer who meets with LGBTQ organizations and youth leaders (though her office would not specify which groups he's met with).

And this month, when a reporter asked her to weigh in on the New Brunswick policy, Smith responded that she wished everyone would "depoliticize" the issue.

"I think it's very damaging for kids to have this playing out in the public realm," she said.

There are thoseon the rightwho are alarmed by the idea of accommodating young people's gender transitions or making youth feel safe when grappling with these changes, but Smith doesn't appear to be, said Corinne Mason, an associate professor of women's and gender studies at Mount Royal University.

"Maybe she's not as scared of the demographic shift as the people doing this really aggressive anti-trans vitriol in this moment," they said. "She sees perhaps an opportunity to expand the tent of the conservative base because she's seeing a shift, and other folks are really like doing their classic 'stand your ground.'"

(Riley Laychuk/CBC )

Mason also highlights the many ways the premier falls short of truly supporting the LGBTQ community she says she wants to embrace. Smith chronically sidesteps opportunities to actually say how she'll better protect rights or youth, or to forcefully condemn egregious acts like that "straight pride" shirt or Jennifer Johnson's remarks or the protests at drag events, Mason noted.

The alarmism and threats against trans people make this a time for action, not backing off, Mason said.

"This is a politicized moment," they said.

One wonders, though, how far Smith can go without creating splits within the UCP base, which includes a good number of social conservatives and those who may not have seen much wrong with a "straight pride" shirt.

In October, UCP grassroots members overwhelmingly passed a policy resolution to strengthen parents' ability to affirm a child's gender identity, though the Smith government hasn't acted on that wish.

David Parker, the head of UCP pressure group Take Back Alberta, teed off last month about LGBTQ issues at a "Leave Our Kids Alone" rally.

"We will not be shaken until this ideology is out of our schools," he said.

These matters clouded much of Smith's days leading the Wildrose Party. Her 2012 election campaign was sunk by an Edmonton candidate's inflammatory comments that gays would suffer afterlife in a "lake of fire," and Smith's subsequent refusal to sanction him. She tried mending fences with the community by attending Pride events, but towardthe end of her Wildrose leadership, party members repealed a statement on equal rights for those of any sexual orientation, a pointed rebuke to Smith's position.

(The Canadian Press)

Mercedes Allen, a co-founder of Trans Equality Society of Alberta, recalls meeting Smith in her Wildrose days. Smith had expressed that she wanted to be an LGBTQ ally, trans people included, Allen recalls.

"I think that she genuinely meant it," she said. "But at the same time, you can't just declare being an ally. A person has to demonstrate that and follow through."

Allen was disappointed by the several days Smith dithered before making a final decision on the UCP's Lacombe candidate's egregiously anti-trans comments. Party insiders widely expect Smith and caucus to allow Johnson back into the UCP fold after excluding her initially, a move that would offend many in the LGBTQ community.

Smith instructed Culture Minister Tanya Fir in a mandate letter to continue"to support and engage with members of Alberta's Francophone and LGBTQ+ communities."

Requests to interview Fir, Smith and outreach lead Nick Kalynchuk were denied. But in a provided statement Fir said "the 2SLGBTQQIA+ community still faces discrimination, and targeted violence," and "Alberta's government will work tirelessly to ensure we build safe communities in which all individuals are free to be their true authentic selves."

It's not clear what any of that will mean in terms of policy yet at the same time Smith has given zero indication of any desire to follow the wishes of the world's Jordan Petersons, David Parkers or Ron DeSantises on this issue.

There are Edmonton and Calgary Pride festivals in the next couple of months. Smith's presence or absence at those events will speak volumes, but two sides of a polarizing issue will want to know what Smith has for them beyond gestures and words.

Jason Markusoff Producer and writer

Jason Markusoff analyzes what's happening and what isn't happening, but probably should be in Calgary and sometimes farther afield. He's written in Alberta for nearly two decades with Maclean's magazine, the Calgary Herald and Edmonton Journal. He appears regularly on Power and Politics' Power Panel and various other CBC current affairs shows. Reach him at jason.markusoff@cbc.ca

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