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      F1 may ditch hybrids for V10s and sustainable fuels

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica · Friday, 21 February - 19:54 · 1 minute

    High-revving naturally aspirated engines and their associated screaming soundtracks might be on their way back to Formula 1. Not with next year's rule changes —that will see even bigger lithium-ion batteries and an even more powerful electric motor, paired with a turbocharged V6. But the sport is starting to think more seriously about the technical rules that will go into effect in 2030, and in an Instagram post yesterday, the man in charge of those rules signaled that he's open to cars that might be louder, lighter, and less complicated.

    Mohammed Ben Sulayem's tenure as president of the Federation Internationale de l'Automobile has been packed with controversy. The former rally driver has alienated many F1 drivers with clampdowns on jewelry and, most recently, swearing, as well as a refusal to explain what happens to the money the FIA collects as fines.

    He also ruffled feathers when the FIA opened up the entry process for new teams into the sport and then approved an entry by Andretti Global . While the FIA said yes, the commercial side (which is owned by Liberty Media) and the teams wanted nothing to do with an 11th team— at least until the $200 million anti-dilution fee was more than doubled and Michael Andretti stepped aside.

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      RFK Jr. promptly cancels vaccine advisory meeting, pulls flu shot campaign

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica · Friday, 21 February - 19:11 · 1 minute

    Just days after anti-vaccine advocate Robert F. Kennedy Jr. became the country's top health official , the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has already pulled back some of its efforts to protect Americans with safe, lifesaving vaccines. The agency has indefinitely postponed a public meeting of its vaccine advisory committee and killed a campaign promoting seasonal flu shots.

    Last weekend, a Washington Post columnist noted on Bluesky that the CDC's effective "Wild to Mild" seasonal flu shot campaign had vanished. The campaign highlighted how the seasonal vaccines can prevent influenza infections from becoming severe or life-threatening. It used animals as an analogy for the diminished threat of the flu virus after vaccination, juxtaposing a lion and a domestic kitten in one ad while showing an elephant and a mouse in another. The CDC page no longer leads to a "not found" landing page, but it wasn't restored either. It now redirects to a 2023 article announcing the campaign, which does not contain the shareable resources found on the original page. The removal is startling given that the US is currently battling one of the worst flu seasons in 15 years.

    NPR first reported that CDC staff were told in a meeting Wednesday, February 19, the campaign was halted. In a story Thursday, Stat News added more context to the decision. According to the outlet's sources, the Department of Health and Human Services’ assistant secretary for public affairs informed the CDC that Kennedy wanted vaccine advertisements to emphasize "informed consent" instead.

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      As the Kernel Turns: Rust in Linux saga reaches the “Linus in all-caps” phase

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica · Friday, 21 February - 18:55

    Rust, a modern and notably more memory-safe language than C, once seemed like it was on a steady, calm, and gradual approach into the Linux kernel.

    In 2021, Linux kernel leaders, like founder and leader Linus Torvalds himself, were impressed with the language but had a "wait and see" approach . Rust for Linux gained supporters and momentum, and in October 2022, Torvalds approved a pull request adding support for Rust code in the kernel .

    By late 2024, however, Rust enthusiasts were frustrated with stalls and blocks on their efforts, with the Rust for Linux lead quitting over " nontechnical nonsense ." Torvalds said at the time that he understood it was slow, but that "old-time kernel developers are used to C" and "not exactly excited about having to learn a new language." Still, this could be considered a normal amount of open source debate.

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      Notorious crooks broke into a company network in 48 minutes. Here’s how.

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica · Friday, 21 February - 18:17

    In December, roughly a dozen employees inside a manufacturing company received a tsunami of phishing messages that was so big they were unable to perform their day-to-day functions. A little over an hour later, the people behind the email flood had burrowed into the nether reaches of the company's network. This is a story about how such intrusions are occurring faster than ever before and the tactics that make this speed possible.

    The speed and precision of the attack—laid out in posts published Thursday and last month —are crucial elements for success. As awareness of ransomware attacks increases, security companies and their customers have grown ever savvier at detecting breach attempts and stopping them before they gain entry to sensitive data. To succeed, attackers have to move ever faster.

    Breakneck breakout

    ReliaQuest, the security firm that responded to this intrusion, said it tracked a 22-percent reduction in the “breakout time” threat actors took in 2024 compared with a year earlier. In the attack at hand, the breakout time—meaning the time span from the moment of initial access to lateral movement inside the network—was just 48 minutes.

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      Google’s cheaper YouTube Premium Lite subscription will drop Music

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica · Friday, 21 February - 17:45

    YouTube dominates online video, but it's absolutely crammed full of ads these days. A YouTube Premium subscription takes care of that, but ad blockers do exist. Google seems to have gotten the message—a cheaper streaming subscription is on the way that drops YouTube Music from the plan. You may have to give up more than music to get the cheaper rate, though.

    Google started testing cheaper YouTube subscriptions in a few international markets, including Germany and Australia, over the past year. Those users have been offered the option of subscribing to the YouTube Premium plan, which runs $13.99 in the US , or a new plan that costs about half as much. For example, in Australia, the options are AU$23 for YouTube Premium or AU$12 for "YouTube Premium Lite."

    The Lite plan drops YouTube Music but keeps ad-free YouTube, which is all most people want anyway. Based on the early tests, these plans will probably drop a few other features that you'd miss, including background playback and offline downloads. However, this plan could cost as little as $7–$8 in the US.

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      DeepSeek goes beyond “open weights” AI with plans for source code release

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica · Friday, 21 February - 16:50

    Last month, DeepSeek turned the AI world on its head with the release of a new, competitive simulated reasoning model that was free to download and use under an MIT license . Now, the company is preparing to make the underlying code behind that model more accessible, promising to release five open source repos starting next week.

    In a social media post late Thursday , DeepSeek said the daily releases it is planning for its "Open Source Week" would provide visibility into "these humble building blocks in our online service [that] have been documented, deployed and battle-tested in production. As part of the open-source community, we believe that every line shared becomes collective momentum that accelerates the journey."

    While DeepSeek has been very non-specific about just what kind of code it will be sharing, an accompanying GitHub page for "DeepSeek Open Infra" promises the coming releases will cover "code that moved our tiny moonshot forward" and share "our small-but-sincere progress with full transparency." The page also refers back to a 2024 paper detailing DeepSeek's training architecture and software stack.

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      Apple pulls data protection tool instead of caving to UK demand for a backdoor

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica · Friday, 21 February - 16:40

    After the United Kingdom demanded that Apple create a backdoor that would allow government officials globally to spy on encrypted data, Apple decided to simply turn off encryption services in the UK rather than risk exposing its customers to snooping.

    Apple had previously allowed end-to-end encryption of data on UK devices through its Advanced Data Protection (ADP) tool, but that ended Friday, a spokesperson said in a lengthy statement.

    "Apple can no longer offer Advanced Data Protection (ADP) in the United Kingdom to new users and current UK users will eventually need to disable this security feature," Apple said.

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      Nissan’s latest desperate gamble—see if Tesla will buy the company

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica · Friday, 21 February - 16:10

    Senior politicians in Japan are not going to let Nissan die easily. The automaker has been struggling for some time now, with an outdated product portfolio, ongoing quarterly losses, and soon, the closure of factories and thousands of layoffs. The Japanese government has been trying to find a suitor and had hoped that Honda would do its patriotic duty and save its rival from extinction.

    That deal—one branded "a desperate move" by former Nissan CEO and fugitive from Japanese justice Carlos Ghosn— fell apart last week after Renault demanded a price premium for its shares in Nissan, and Nissan demanded a merger of equals with Honda. In reality, it was always going to be a takeover, with very little in it for Honda in the way of complimentary product lines or access to new technologies.

    Today, we learned of yet another desperate move —the former Japanese Prime Minister Yoshihide Suga is among a group that is trying to get Tesla to invest in Nissan instead.

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      SEC’s “scorched-earth” lawsuit against Coinbase to be dropped, company says

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica · Friday, 21 February - 15:55

    On Friday, a Coinbase executive declared the "war against crypto" over—"at least as it applies to Coinbase."

    According to Coinbase chief legal officer Paul Grewal, the US Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) plans to drop its lawsuit against the largest US cryptocurrency exchange, as the agency shifts to embrace Donald Trump's new approach to regulating cryptocurrency in the US.

    The SEC sued Coinbase in 2023, accusing Coinbase of "operating its crypto asset trading platform as an unregistered national securities exchange, broker, and clearing agency" and "failing to register the offer and sale of its crypto asset staking-as-a-service program."

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