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In case you missed it, #BSidesCharm 2026 tickets are now on sale!! Go to https://www.eventbrite.com/e/bsidescharm-2026-tickets-1982620739001

We've just launched a revised design for the map! This adds more consistent symbology, and a few new symbols (including power portals), and better rendering of substation detail. This work was done with the help of @Catalogtree.

This is the first phase of the redesign - we'll be doing some more work on the UI of the map which will hopefully be ready soon.

Any feedback is welcome!

One of the two amateur radios on the International Space Station is busted. No SSTV (Slow Scan Television) opportunities for us earth-bound geeks in the near future.

https://www.facebook.com/ARISSIntl

To save you a click-thru to FB:
"After 3 days of troubleshooting the ARISS ops team has determined SSTV Series 30 can not continue.
The ARISS radio in the Service Module used for SSTV is being taken out of service."

https://www.ariss.org/

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Do you (or your kid) like checking sports scores - but despise the garish, resource-hogging adverts, sensational headlines about everything besides the games themselves, talking heads, and not-very-subtle steering towards gambling, as present on mainstream sports websites?

https://plaintextsports.com/ is awesome. Thank you, so much, to its creator.
(click through on any game to see a detailed box score - all still in *plain text*)

Plain Text Sports

Instant live sports scores, play-by-play, and box scores

“Will the future be more secure? It'll be just as insecure as it possibly can, while still continuing to function. Just like it is today.” -Marcus Ranum, 2007, as cited by TaoSecurity Blog, 2007, and repeated in The Best of TaoSecurity Blog Volume 3, 2020.

Another interesting vulnerability found in widespread (moving) infrastructure, using software-defined radio (this originally identified 13 years ago!) :
https://www.tomshardware.com/tech-industry/cyber-security/security-vulnerability-on-u-s-trains-that-let-anyone-activate-the-brakes-on-the-rear-car-was-known-for-13-years-operators-refused-to-fix-the-issue-until-now

"Back when it was first implemented in the late 1980s, it was illegal for anyone else to use the frequencies allocated for this system. So, the system only used the BCH checksum for packet creation. Unfortunately, anyone with an SDR could mimic these packets, allowing them to send false signals to the EoT (End-of-Train) module and its corresponding Head-of-Train (HoT) partner. This would not have been an urgent issue if the EoT had only sent telemetry data. However, the HoT can also issue a brake command to the EoT through this system. Thus, anyone with the hardware (available for less than $500) and know-how can easily issue a brake command without the train driver’s knowledge, potentially compromising the safety of the transport operation."

Security vulnerability on U.S. trains that let anyone activate the brakes on the rear car, was known for 13 years — operators refused to fix the issue until now

Wireless hardware to seriously disrupt rail transport costs less than $500.

Tom's Hardware

Read “The Psychology of Money”

On having enough.

#books

We're living in the future! (almost..)

"Relativity Space as a means to support the development of data centers in space. Such data centers, ideally, would be powered by solar panels and be able to radiate heat into the vacuum of space."

https://arstechnica.com/space/2025/05/eric-schmidt-apparently-bought-relativity-space-to-put-data-centers-in-orbit/

Eric Schmidt apparently bought Relativity Space to put data centers in orbit

“Gives you a sense of how big this crisis is.”…

Ars Technica
We misunderstood the concept of afterlife. What the religious texts meant to say is that the essence of your online life will be preserved as the weights of an LLM that handles airline customer support and prescribes Viagra in a telehealth app.

This is going to be *interesting*... The EU will make vendors liable for bugs:

https://news.risky.biz/risky-biz-news-the-eu-will-make-vendors-liable-for-bugs/

"The new directive extends liability to vendors for software that contains security flaws... includes both physical damage caused by defective or insecure software but also material damage, such as loss of functionality and features, loss of financial assets, and others."

EU extends liability definition to cover software and security flaws

In other news: Wiper attacks hit Israel via ESET partner; Microsoft loses weeks of security logs; DOD looks to buy deepfake tech.

Risky.Biz