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Showing posts from January 27, 2019

he Cisco SD-WAN security problems were part of 23 security advisories Cisco announced on Jan.

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Cisco has patched security vulnerabilities in four packages of SD-WAN Solution software that address buffer overflow, arbitrary file override and privilege access weaknesses that could have led to denial-of-service attacks or access problems. The first patch, called “Critical” by Cisco, fixes a vulnerability in the vContainer of the Cisco SD-WAN Solution that could let an authenticated, remote attacker cause a denial of service (DoS) and execute arbitrary code as the  root  user, the company  wrote  in a security advisory.  Cisco patches serious SD-WAN software security holes The Cisco SD-WAN security problems were part of 23 security advisories Cisco announced on Jan. 23 Getty Images           By  Michael Cooney Network World JAN 25, 2019 8:27 AM PT Cisco has patched security vulnerabilities in four packages of SD-WAN Solution software that address buffer overflow, arbitrary file override and privilege access weaknesses that could have led to denia

Venezuela: Spain, Germany, France give Maduro ultimatum

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Spain, France and Germany on Saturday gave embattled Venezuelan leader Nicolas Maduro an ultimatum, saying they would recognise opposition leader Juan Guaido as president unless he calls elections within eight days. President Nicolas Maduro gets ultimatum from France, Germany, Spain to call fresh election The ultimatum comes as international pressure mounts on the Maduro regime to agree a new vote, with the United States, Canada and major South American players already recognising Guaido, who proclaimed himself acting president of Venezuela during massive street rallies this week. After four years of economic pain that has left Venezuelans short of food and medicine and driven more than two million to flee, Guaido is trying to oust Maduro following controversial elections that saw the socialist leader sworn in for a second term. “If within eight days there are no fair, free and transparent elections called in Venezuela, Spain will recognise Juan Guaido as Venezuelan president” so

Russian bombers buzz North American coastline

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© Wojtek Laski/Getty Images A Tu-160 bomber lands at a Russian airbase in 2008. A pair of Russian supersonic, nuclear-capable bombers buzzed North America Saturday, forcing American and Canadian fighter jets to scramble and intercept them, the U.S. military said. The two Russian Tu-160 Blackjack bombers “remained in international airspace,” but were escorted by two U.S. Air Force F-22 fighter jets and two Canadian CF-18 jets, according to a statement from the North American Aerospace Defense Command, better known as NORAD. The U.S. jets flew from an Air Force base in Alaska. The Russian bomber flight near North America — the first known flight this year — coincides with the visit of NATO’s Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg to Washington to meet Secretary of State Mike Pompeo, acting Defense Secretary Pat Shanahan and national security adviser John Bolton.  President Trump has mulled pulling the United States out of NATO, according to senior administration officials. U.S. re

US economy lost at least $6 billion during shutdown, S&P says

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© AP Photo/Andrew Harnik FILE - Air Traffic and pilot unions protest the government shutdown on Capitol Hill in Washington, Thursday, Jan. 10, 2019. (AP Photo/Andrew Harnik) The U.S. economy lost at least $6 billion during the record-long partial government shutdown, S&P Global Ratings said Friday. The economic hit stems from a loss of productivity and economic activity lost to outside business during the shutdown, which ended on its 35th day on Friday, Reuters reported. Nearly 800,000 federal employees were furloughed or working without pay during the shutdown. The shutdown, the longest in U.S. history, started on Dec. 22 over President Trump's demand for $5.7 billion in funding for his long-desired wall along the U.S.-Mexico border. Trump signed a three-week funding bill on Friday night, formally ending the shutdown without securing money for a border wall.  Trump warned that if he cannot get a "fair deal" when the stopgap bill runs out, the government may

Emiliano Sala's final text messages with agent reveal flight confusion

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Emiliano Sala was in the process of checking flight arrangements when he was offered the private plane which disappeared over the Channel taking him back to Cardiff. Sky News have released a transcript of messages between Sala and Jack McKay, son of agent Willie McKay, arranging the Piper Malibu flight which is presumed to have crashed on Monday evening. McKay was involved in the move to take Sala to Cardiff City for a club record fee where he was due to become a team-mate of Jack. New messages reveal the Argentinian striker was in the process of sorting his own arrangements when he received the offer of a private flight straight from Nantes to Cardiff ahead of his first training session with the Bluebirds. Sala seems uncertain over the arrangements, including whether he can take luggage on the plane. McKay released the messages in a statement in which he confirmed he arranged the flight but did not select the aircraft or the pilot. McKay said: "In regards to the book