Categories
US

Kiely Rodni surveillance photo shows Truckee teen hours before disappearance

anew photo of Kiely Rodni shows the missing 16-year-old hours before she vanished on August 6 in Truckee.

The missing teen was last seen at a party at a campground, but the security camera image shows her earlier in the night at a Truckee business.

The picture shows Kiely in a black bodysuit, green pants and black Vans shoes as she stood among racks of apparel and other merchandise. That photo was taken hours before she attended a party with hundreds of other young people at the Prosser Family Campground, according to the Placer County sheriff’s office.

Kiely Rodni, 16, is seen on surveillance video hours before she vanished after attending a party at a Truckee campground on Aug. 6, 2022. Photo: Placer County Sheriff (KTVU FOX 2)

The search for Kiely has widened in recent days with 265 officers from local, state, and federal agencies combing the campground and other nearby areas. Dive teams have started searching the Prosser Reservoir for signs of her de ella or her Honda CRV de ella, which has also not been found.

Kiely texted her mother to say she was going home from the party. Her cellphone pinged shortly after that, but she has been inactive for days, the sheriff’s office said.

The sheriff’s office has reportedly said they were looking to see if Kiely had been abducted, although officials said Tuesday that this was still a missing person case.

Her mother had made a heartfelt plea for her return in a video released earlier this week.

“We just want her home. We’re so scared. We miss her so much and we love her,” her mother Lindsey Rodni-Nieman said as she choked back tears in a video shared by the sheriff’s office. “Kiely, we love you, and if you see this, please just come home. I want nothing more than to hug you.”

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Categories
Sports

NRL 2022: Lara Pitt reveals ‘hardest part’ of her job, Round 22 preview, premiership dark horse, Sharks, Dragons

The race for the NRL finals is heating up and this weekend will see several tantalizing match-ups that are certain to shape the make-up of the top eight.

The Panthers face the Storm tonight, before Parramatta take on South Sydney on Friday night and the Roosters play the Cowboys on Saturday afternoon.

“I think the top four battle is heating up for sure,” Fox League’s Lara Pitt told news.com.au ahead of round 22.

Stream every game of every round of the 2022 NRL Telstra Premiership Season Live & Ad-Break Free During Play on Kayo. New to Kayo? Start your free trial now >

“I think the Storm have probably got a tough one to win against the Panthers even though Penrith don’t have (Nathan) Cleary and (Jarome) Luai — they’re always extremely tough to beat at home.

“The Eels-Rabbitohs game is one of the hardest of the round, equally Roosters-Cowboys. Those two games are massive. I found those the hardest to pick but I’ve gone with the Roosters and Parramatta.

“The Parramatta Eels, that’s a huge game against the Rabbitohs, if they win that they’re into the top four.

The Panthers sit three games clear on top of the ladder and are red-hot favorites to win back-to-back premierships, but Pitt believes Cronulla are a “dark horse” heading into finals.

“I’ve been at the last couple of Sharks games on the sideline and been really impressed with how gritty and the style of football they’re playing,” she said.

“They can get into an arm wrestle. They still haven’t hit peak form, there’s still improvement to come for them.

“They’re winning ugly, they’re winning tough, then when they play well they can score points. I’d say the Sharks are possibly the dark horse.

“I think the eight is pretty much settled when I look at the standings at the teams that have kind of fallen over at the wrong end of the season — Manly, Raiders and Dragons unfortunately have left it a bit too late.

“I think the eight is probably the way it is now but everyone will be jostling for where they actually finish in the eight. I back the Roosters and the Broncos to secure their place in finals, it’s just about how high they can finish.”

Gruesome injuries ‘hardest part’ of the job

In her role as Fox League’s sideline reporter, Pitt has witnessed several nasty injuries this season including Stephen Crichton’s mauled ear, Ryan Papenhuyzen suffering a fractured knee cap and Aaron Booth rupturing his ACL last weekend.

Pitt said having to interview players after they’ve suffered season-ending injuries is the “hardest part” of her job.

“The Stephen Crichton one stands out the most,” she said.

“I think even he probably was in shock himself and didn’t realize his ear was hanging off walking around the stadium saying g’day to the fans at the end of the game, then had to head off to hospital and have a plastic surgeon sew his ear together.

“There’s been that one and obviously seeing Aaron Booth go down for the Titans last week, he has sustained the most serious knee injury you can get.

“I spoke to him after the game. He knows he’s got a long road to recovery but I was pretty surprised at how strong he was and how he looked like he was going to take it head on, which is pretty incredible when he’s just sustained a horrific knee injury.

“It’s probably not the best part of the job at all and speaking to players just after they’ve ruined their year or they’ve got that long comeback trail ahead of them, that’s probably the hardest part.

“I don’t like watching the replays of horrendous injuries, that’s for sure. I’ll certainly look away. I’m not too frightened by the blood and the gore of it, but I’m not watching the replays of knees going the wrong way, that’s for sure.”

Dragons need star power around Hunt

St George Illawarra take on the Raiders in a Fox League exclusive game on Sunday and while both sides appear out of the finals race, they will be desperate for a win.

Pitt believes the Dragons need to recruit some star players in the spine to support Ben Hunt, if they are any chance to make finals in 2023.

“The club has made some moves to change the support staff around Anthony Griffin. Clearly they can see it’s not working,” she said.

“The concern is now that they’re not bringing on board any high caliber players into the roster to help Ben Hunt and he desperately needs the help. It’s hard to see how they’ll be any better next year with just some assistant coaching movements.

“If that’s the case, then the pressure will be firmly on the club and the coach early next year if they don’t make any movement in performance on the field.

“Overall, just hugely disappointing that they haven’t improved this year and they’ve failed to make finals.”

Watch the St George Illawarra Dragons vs Canberra Raiders at 1pm on Sunday only on Fox League.

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Categories
Australia

NRL player remains on bail after guilty verdict over 2019 stabbing

Manly Sea Eagles hooker Manase Fainu will remain on bail over the weekend after being found guilty of stabbing a church youth leader in a brawl outside a sydney dance.

The 24-year-old pleaded not guilty to wounding Faamanu Levi with intent to cause grievous bodily harm at Wattle Grove late at night on October 25, 2019.

In his evidence to the District Court jury, he denied being the stabber, saying when he heard “knife knife” he ran away scared for his own safety.

Manly NRL player Manase Fainu has been found guilty over the stabbing of a man at a church in 2019. (Rhett Wyman)

But the jurors took just over two hours to return a guilty verdict on Thursday afternoon, prompting prosecutor Emma Curran to apply for immediate detention.

Judge Nanette Williams adjourned the application until Monday because of the late hour and because Friday’s industrial strike by prison officers would mean he couldn’t be taken into custody if she so ruled.

Fainu’s barrister Margaret Cunneen SC opposed the application saying he had not breached any bail conditions over the last three years.

“This obviously will be appealed as a perverse verdict in view of the evidence,” she said.

Noting it would be surprising if full-time custody was not imposed, the judge ordered Fainu to report to police daily, live with his parents and not leave the address without one of them, and not contact any witnesses.

Tony Quach testified to seeing Fainu plunge a steak knife into the back of Levi in ​​the car park brawl, referring to him looking angry and wearing a sling.

The jury was told the footballer had recently undergone shoulder surgery and had his arm in a sling that evening.

The stabbing occurred after an earlier fight on the dancefloor of the alcohol-free charity event organized by the Church of the Latter Day Saints.

Cunneen had submitted that in the heat of the moment, with the darkness, chaos and speed of it unfolding, the jury could not be certain who stabbed Levi.

But they could be certain the NRL hooker, never before in trouble for any violence, did not, she said.

NRL Manly player Manase Fainu
Fainu (centre) will remain on bail over the weekend. (Wolter Peeters)

The jurors were told Fainu and his friend Uona Faingaa, known as “Big Buck”, were involved in the dancefloor fight and ushered outside by Levi, who told them not to fight on church grounds.

CCTV footage showed Fainu with a white towel draped over his head and his four friends jumping back over a fence and into a car park where the brawl occurred with Levi.

Curran contended that when things looked like they were getting out of hand, Fainu pulled out the knife and plunged it into Levi’s back.

“Not content with having stabbed him once… (Fainu) moved around to the front of Mr Levi and swung the knife upwards towards (his) face cutting him across the eyebrow,” Curran said.

“Then he ran back to the car.”

Another witness involved in the brawl told the court that he saw a male in a sling approach his brother holding a knife.

“The accused was the only person in a sling. And a sling is quite a distinctive feature,” Curran said.

Fainu could face up to 25 years in prison. (APA)

She argued that Fainu was an unimpressive and evasive witness who gave contradictory and occasionally fanciful answers.

She asked the jury to reject such evidence including his reason for scaling a three-metre tall brick fence to get back onto the church grounds, rather than entering through the front gate, because “it was easier”.

He told the jury the white towel draped over his head was a “security blanket” doused in cold water because he had a headache, not to hide his identity.

Fainu also denied holding, seeing, or knowing of a weapon being brought that evening.

Categories
US

Judge: Walgreens helped fuel San Francisco’s opioid crisis

A federal judge ruled Wednesday that pharmacy giant Walgreens could be held liable for fueling the opioid epidemic in San Francisco by shipping and dispensing hundreds of thousands of “suspicious orders” of prescription drugs, the latest legal reckoning over America’s prescription drug crisis.

More than 100 million prescription opioid pills were dispensed by Walgreens in the city between 2006 and 2020, and during that time, the pharmacy giant failed to investigate hundreds of thousands of orders deemed suspicious, US District Judge Charles Breyer wrote in his 112-page opinion in a lawsuit filed by San Francisco against major prescription drug sellers.

“Walgreens has regulatory obligations to take reasonable steps to prevent the drugs from being diverted and harming the public,” Breyer wrote. “The evidence at trial established that Walgreens breached these obligations.”

The judge’s decision in the nonjury trial opens the door to a trial on the extent of the financial liability the company would face.

The public nuisance lawsuit, filed by the city in 2018, also included claims against Johnson & Johnson, Allergan, Purdue Pharma, Teva Pharmaceutical Industries and Endo International, as well as McKesson Corp., AmerisourceBergen Corp. and Cardinal Health — three of the biggest drug distributors in the country.

Walgreens was the only company that didn’t reach a settlement with the city before the ruling. Johnson & Johnson and the three drug distributors were part of a $26-billion nationwide settlement earlier this year.

The opioid crisis has ravaged San Francisco in recent years. Emergency because visits of opioids have spiked from 886 in 2015 to 2,998 in 2020, according to court filings. In 2019, about 40,958 city residents out of about 860,000 San Franciscans suffered from opioid addiction. In 2019, about 1,939 city residents overdosed on opioids, averaging to about 5.3 overdoses a day.

Peter Mougey, one of the attorneys representing the city, said the verdict sheds a light on the negligence Walgreens displayed in failing to stop the opioid epidemic in San Francisco.

“The sun has set on Walgreens’ attempt to hide the evidence of its nonexistent opioid compliance program while it instead focused on profits by flooding San Francisco with a tsunami of pills,” he said.

The company expressed its disappointment with the decision and said it’s planning to appeal, according to Walgreens spokesperson Fraser Engerman.

“As we have said throughout this process, we never manufactured or marketed opioids, nor did we distribute them to the ‘pill mills’ and internet pharmacies that fueled this crisis,” he said in a statement.

Daniel Ciccarone, a professor of addiction medicine at UC San Francisco, said that companies turning a blind eye to the oversupply of opioid prescriptions has led to the rise of heroin and fentanyl addiction by increasing the pool of people dependent or addicted to opioids.

“Most of them migrated to safety, but 4% to 6% of this population migrated over to heroin because they were no longer having their addiction or pain needs fulfilled through pills,” he said. “For a while, the pills were available on the street, but even that pill supply dried up and what you’re left with is plentiful heroin on American streets. For unclear reasons, fentanyl has been a substitute or a contaminant of the heroin supply and now we see the third wave of the opioid crisis, which is the historically unseen rise of overdose deaths due to fentanyl.”

Walgreens distributed prescription opioids to its San Francisco pharmacies until 2014 without investigating orders or maintaining “an effective system for identifying suspicious orders,” Breyer said. The US Drug Enforcement Administration shut down one of the company’s three controlled substance distribution centers in 2012 because of the center’s failure to surveil suspicious orders. Walgreens stopped distributing controlled substances in 2014 and started outsourcing to third-party distributors.

Federal regulations require companies to investigate “red flag” prescriptions and verify that the opioid prescriptions are medically legitimate before dispensing them. Walgreens dispensed hundreds of thousands of “red flag” opioids without investigating them; Tens of thousands of the prescriptions were “written by doctors with suspect prescribing patterns” and hundreds of thousands were written by doctors who would later have their licenses suspended or go to prison, according to Breyer’s ruling.

The company also didn’t give pharmacists enough staffing, time or resources to adequately review the prescriptions, Breyer wrote. Pharmacists said they endured “constant pressure to fill prescriptions as quickly as possible.”

Pharmacists testified that they were aware they dispensed opioid prescriptions that they knew shouldn’t have been filled. One said that after he filled a prescription at a San Francisco pharmacy, he saw it was being sold in the parking lot.

Breyer also ruled that Walgreens filled prescriptions from prescribers who were blocked from other pharmacy chains or were deemed suspicious. In one instance, after a Walgreens pharmacy in San Francisco refused to fill prescriptions for a “suspicious” doctor, other Walgreens pharmacies dispensed 86,904 opioid pills for his prescriptions.

The pharmacy giant reached a $683-million settlement earlier this year with the state of Florida over claims of dispensing millions of opioids that worsened the crisis.

In November, a federal jury in Ohio found that Walgreens, along with CVS and Walmart, recklessly distributed pills that resulted in hundreds of overdose deaths and cost two Ohio counties about $1 billion each.

Ciccarone said that he hopes the money obtained through the lawsuits and settlements will be used to help reduce the risk of opioid overdoses and provide resources for treatment.

“This is a crisis and there’s a huge, vulnerable population in need,” he added.

For those involved in addiction, the ruling felt like a victory, even for those without a direct connection to Walgreens.

Laurie Steves’ daughter Jessica DiDia lives on the streets of San Francisco and is addicted to fentanyl and crack cocaine. Steves said she drove from Tacoma, Wash., to San Francisco last summer to try to get DiDia to get clean, but to no avail.

“Her addiction is so bad that she actively seeks fentanyl every day,” Steves said. “She lost her partner to a fentanyl overdose about three months ago. I was hoping that it would be a wake-up call for her but it wasn’t.”

Tom Wolf lived in a home in Daly City with his wife and two children and worked as a child support officer for the city. But in early 2015, he underwent foot surgery and was prescribed 10 milligrams of oxycodone by his doctor.

Wolf was given a 30-day supply but he started taking three pills at a time. When his supply ran out, he went through withdrawal and started buying drugs off the street in San Francisco until his wife gave him an ultimatum: Go to rehab or leave the house.

Wolf chose the drugs, living on the streets and getting arrested six times in 2018 before getting sober through a drug treatment program. Wolf said that when he was buying pills in San Francisco, his main dealer was getting oxycodone through legal prescriptions from the local Veterans Affairs hospital.

“That was the benchmark,” he said. “I took those 30 milligrams and I felt euphoria. Any marital or financial problems went away for three to four hours and I liked that feeling and I wanted to keep having that feeling.”

Having been sober for four years and reconciled with his family, Wolf said he was glad about the Walgreens ruling.

“It’s a double-edged sword,” Wolf said. “It’s 10 years too late but I’m glad they’re being held accountable. I’m also sad because that by overprescribing, they contributed to millions of Americans struggling with addiction and the rise of illicit fentanyl in this country.”

Categories
Business

2023 Maserati GranTurismo due in Australia next year with electric power

Maserati’s first new GranTurismo coupe in 16 years may reach Australia before the end of next year – and an electric version has already been locked in.


Above: Maserati GranTurismo Folgore prototype.

the 2023 Maserati GranTurismo coupe is due in Australian showrooms at the end of next year – barring no further delays – with an expected choice of petrol and electric power.

Due to be unveiled globally by Maserati in early 2023, the second-generation GranTurismo sports coupe will be the first new model in 16 years (since 2007) – and the first to be available with electric power, badged Folgore.

Assuming there are no further delays, the new GranTurismo is due in Australian showrooms at the end of 2023, and will be available in electric Folgore form – likely alongside a traditional petrol-engined version, which has been spied testing overseas.



Above: Maserati GranTurismo Folgore prototype with Stellantis group CEO Carlos Tavares.

It’s set to be Maserati’s first electric car in Australia, beating the Grecale Folgore – the electric version of the brand’s new mid-size SUV – to market by a few months.

“I think if anything from an electrification point of view… GranTurismo has probably been the one that’s had the most interest, being the first Maserati with [electric power] – which hopefully we’ll see at the end of next year,” Maserati Australia general manager Grant Barling told media.

“The Grecale [Folgore]we probably won’t see until the following year, in the first quarter of 2024 [January to March] – literally 12 months after we launch [the petrol-powered range, in early 2023].”



Alongside the electric Folgore, a traditional GranTurismo powered by petrol will be available (spied below), rumored to use a version of Maserati’s new 3.0-litre twin-turbo ‘Nettuno’ V6, which develops between 390kW/620Nm and 463kW/730Nm in other models.

It remains to be seen if the petrol model will launch here at the same time as the Folgore – however an Australian launch at some point for the GranTurismo V6 appears highly likely.

“I believe that customers should have choice – and then eventually we’ll evolve,” Barling told media this week.



“The question is will it come with the [electric] and [petrol versions] to launch? So that’s probably the next question we’re asking. I think it should.”

A GranCabrio convertible version of the GranTurismo is due at a later date. Overseas, it’s slated to go on sale towards the end of next year – so an Australian launch in 2024 looks more likely.

While the twin-turbo V6 petrol version’s outputs will likely be higher than any version of the old GranTurismo – which offered 338kW/520Nm from a 4.7-litre Ferrari V8 – the electric Folgore will offer nearly twice as much power as Maserati’s current most powerful car .



Plans confirmed earlier this year will bestow the GranTurismo Folgore with three electric motors (two rear, one front) and a battery pack along the center of the car, developing “way over” 883kW.

That’s close to double the output of today’s V6-powered MC20 supercar (463kW) – and nearly three times the output of the original GranTurismo launched in 2007.

With a 0-100km/h time below two seconds, and a top speed beyond 300km/h, the GranTurismo Folgore is also set to be one of the fastest Maseratis ever built.



The electric GranTurismo Folgore will also draw electric motor technology from Maserati’s upcoming entry into the Formula E electric racing series – and will offer “top class” DC fast charging capability.

The coupe will form part of an expanded and revitalized Maserati model range – every member of which is due to offer an electric option by 2025, before petrol engines are ditched entirely by 2030.

The GranTurismo and GranCabrio will be joined by the new Grecale medium SUV, followed by an electric version of the MC20 by 2025, and all-new versions of the Quattroporte sedan and Levante large SUV by the same time, both with all-electric variants.

If its launch timing holds steady, the Maserati GranTurismo Folgore may be Australia’s first two-door electric sports car since the original Tesla Roadster was discontinued here in 2012.

The Rolls-Royce Specter (due from late 2023) is more super-luxury than super-sports car, while Chinese brand MG’s new Cyberster electric roadster isn’t likely to arrive before 2024.

alex misoyannis

Alex Misoyannis has been writing about cars since 2017, when he started his own website, Redline. He contributed for Drive in 2018, before joining CarAdvice in 2019, becoming a regular contributing journalist within the news team in 2020. Cars have played a central role throughout Alex’s life, from flicking through car magazines as a young age, to growing up around performance vehicles in a car-loving family.

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Technology

Yet another Microsoft RCE bug under active exploit • The Register

August Patch Tuesday clicks off the week of hacker summer camp in Las Vegas this year, so it’s basically a code cracker’s holiday too.

Let’s start off with Microsoft’s 121 security holes, which are the most interesting of the ever-growing, second-Tuesday patch party. Plus, they include one that Redmond lists as under active attack and a second that it says is also publicly known.

Of the 121 Microsoft bugs, 17 are considered critical. Both of the bugs listed as publicly known are ranked as “important” holes to fix. But since they pose the greatest risk to orgs, which are now basically in a race to patch versus cybercriminals, we suggest starting with these two.

First, CVE-2022-34713, a remote code execution vulnerability in Microsoft Windows Support Diagnostic Tool (MSDT) that’s under active attack. It received a 7.8 CVSS severity score and it has a low attack complexity, so it’s safe to assume other miscreants will find and exploit this hole in the near future.

To exploit this bug, an attacker would need to trick a victim into opening a specially crafted file, likely either via a phishing email or malicious website that contains a file designed to exploit the vulnerability.

“An attacker would have no way to force users to visit the website,” Microsoft explained. “Instead, an attacker would have to convince users to click a link.”

However, as we’ve witnessed with the recent Twilio breach and others, this doesn’t normally require a whole lot of convincing on the part of these wily criminals.

After convincing users to click a malicious file, such as a Word document, the application calls MSDT using the URL protocol, and can then run arbitrary code on the victim’s machine with the privileges of the calling application.

“The attacker can then install programs, view, change, or delete data, or create new accounts in the context allowed by the user’s rights,” Microsoft noted in a blog about an earlier MSDT flaw.

And yes, this issue of MSDT bugs under active exploit has been an ongoing issue for the software giant.

“It’s not clear if this vulnerability is the result of a failed patch or something new,” the Zero Day Initiative’s Dustin Childs noted. “Either way, test and deploy this fix quickly.”

The second Microsoft vulnerability listed as publicly known, tracked as CVE-2022-30134, is an information disclosure bug in Microsoft Exchange. It received a 7.6 CVSS score.

An exploit would require convincing a user with an affected version of Exchange Server to access a malicious server, which would then allow the attacker to read targeted email messages.

According to Redmond, turning on Extended Protection for Exchange Server prevents this attack.

Meanwhile two critical bugs in this month’s roundup, both remote code execution flaws in Windows Point-to-Point Protocol, received near-perfect 9.8 out of 10 severity scores. However, both CVE-2022-30133 and CVE-2022-35744 can only be exploited by communicating via Port 1723, according to Microsoft.

This means blocking traffic through this port works as a temporary workaround. However, “disabling Port 1723 could affect communications over your network,” Redmond warned.

There’s also a trio of critical Exchange Server escalation of privilege bugs, CVE-2022-21980, CVE-2022-24516 and CVE-2022-24477, that, according to Immersive Labs’ Director of Cyber ​​Threat Research Kev Breen “warrant an urgent patch “if your company runs local exchange servers.

All three received an 8.0 CVSS score and could allow unauthenticated users to take over all of the mailboxes on the server.

“Exchanges can be treasure troves of information, making them valuable targets for attackers,” Breen told The Register.

“With CVE-2022-24477, for example, an attacker can gain initial access to a user’s host and could take over the mailboxes for all exchange users, sending and reading emails and documents,” he explained. “For attackers focused on business email compromise this kind of vulnerability can be extremely damaging.”

Enabling Extended Protection also protects against these flaws.

Adobe issues five fixes for 25 bugs

Adobe issued five fixes for 25 vulnerabilities today that affect both Windows and macOS users.

We’d suggest starting with the security update that addresses three critical and four important bugs in Acrobat and Reader. “Successful exploitation could lead to arbitrary code execution and memory leak,” the software provider warned.

Additionally, Illustrator’s four critical and important vulnerabilities and FrameMaker’s six critical and important bugs could lead to arbitrary code execution and memory leak if left unpatched.

One critical bug in Premiere Elements could allow an unauthorized user to escalate privileges.

And finally, the vendor released patches for Commerce and Magento Open Source that fix seven critical, important and moderate vulnerabilities. Miscreants could use these bugs to execute arbitrary code on victims’ machines, escalate privileges and bypass security features.

According to Adobe, none of these flaws have been exploited in the wild.

Intel fixes secret-spilling CPU bug

Intel, a more recent entrant to the second-tuesday patchapalooza, today released 27 advisories to fix 59 vulnerabilities.

One of these addresses an architectural error in certain recent Intel CPUs that can be abused to expose SGX enclave data like private encryption keys.

Dubbed “ÆPIC Leak” by the six researchers who found the hardware bug, CVE-2022-21233 affects the memory-mapped registers of the local Advanced Programmable Interrupt Controller (APIC), which helps the CPU handle interrupt requests from various sources to facilitate multiprocessing .

Intel recommends that anyone using a buggy processor update to the latest version firmware, and said it will soon release SGX software development kit updates, too.

Additionally, chipzilla released microcode updates for affected CPUs supported on the public github repository.

SAP updates to ‘hot-news’ Chromium hole

For its Security Patch Day today, SAP released five new security notes and two updates to previously issued alerts.

This includes one “hot-news” priority bug, which received a 10 out of 10 CVSS score, along with one high priority and five medium-priority fixes.

The most pressing hot-news item is an update to an April SAP Security Note that addressed 52 Chromium fixes for SAP Business Client customers.

Additionally, a high-priority information disclosure vulnerability tracked as CVE-2022-32245 in the vendor’s Business Objects Business Intelligence Platform deserves prompt patching.

It received a CVSS score of 8.2, and relates to the Open Document web app within the BI platform. If left unpatched, it could allow an unauthenticated user to exfiltrate sensitive information in plain text over the network, according to the SAP security researchers at Onapsis.

“This includes any data available for business users,” they added. “The vulnerability could also be exploited to put load on the application, by an automated attack, so data is transferred permanently over the network.”

Hopefully you patched this VMware bug last week

VMware, meanwhile, issued three new security updates today and warned that a critical authentication bypass bug disclosed last week has since been exploited in the wild.

As for the virtualization giant’s new updates: one addresses four “important” bugs in vRealize Operations. The most serious of these, CVE-2022-31672, which received a 7.2 CVSS score would allow a user with administrative network access to escalate privileges to root.

Two others, CVE-2022-31674 and CVE-2022-31673, are information disclosure vulnerabilities. The fourth, CVE-2022-31675, is an authentication bypass bug.

Google fixed RCE over Bluetooth

Finally, rounding out the August patch party, Google patched 37 vulnerabilities affecting Android devices.

“The most severe of these issues is a critical security vulnerability in the System component that could lead to remote code execution over Bluetooth with no additional execution privileges needed,” according to the security bulletin. ®

Categories
Sports

Penrith Panthers v Melbourne Storm, result, kick-off time, updates, round 22, news, Paul Green, minute’s silence

Cameron Smith has expressed his surprise at Cameron Munster being shifted back to five-eighth for Melbourne’s clash with Penrith tonight.

Munster, in the eyes of the former Storm captain, should remain at fullback for Melbourne’s match against the reigning premiers.

Nick Meaney, returning from a one-game break due to a shoulder injury, has been named at fullback, and Munster will partner Cooper Johns in the halves.

Jahrome Hughes remains sidelined after suffering a shoulder injury during the Storm’s win against the Titans last week, in which Munster bagged a hat-trick and piled up 252 run meters.

“Is there a world — it might sound crazy. But is there a world once (Jahrome) Hughes gets back that (Munster) stays there (at fullback)?” Denan Kemp asked Smith on SEN radio.

“I thought he would’ve been there this week,” Smith said.

“I thought he would, too, just to keep him there,” Kemp replied.

“As a defend, what am I more scared of: Munster at six where I know where he is and where he’s lining up, or Munster popping up anywhere and I have to be ready for it?”

Smith highlighted Munster’s attacking prowess at fullback.

“He gets a look at more opportunities… when he’s playing fullback,” Smith said.

“He can just roam the field and pop up where he needs to be.

“I was a little bit surprised. I thought (coach Craig Bellamy) may have kept him there, and the only reason he’s back there is because of Jahrome Hughes — his injury and him not being there.”

Categories
Australia

New smoking ban in WA prisons prompt fears of jail riots

Smoking will be banned in WA prisons, in a move that risks a new riot flashpoint in jails across the State.

The ban will begin at Bandyup Women’s Prison, where inmates will be forced to stub out on October 31.

Prison bosses will evaluate the fallout with the attempt of making all other jails smoke-free.

WA is the only jurisdiction in Australia where smoking is allowed in jail. Prisoners are allowed to light up outdoors.

Previous governments have toyed with the idea because exposing prison staff to passive smoke rubs against occupational health and safety laws. But successive administrations have shied away from a ban for fear of inciting riots.

Four in five prisoners smoke and each year 5000 smokers spend $10 million on tobacco at jail canteens – half of all sales. A 25g pouch of White Ox tobacco costs $63.10.

Picture of the external front view of Bandyup Women's Prison in West Swan, Perth.  Picture: Ross Swanborough.  190819
Camera IconBandyup Women’s Prison. Credit: ross swanborough/The West Australian

The change at Bandyup will see prisoners, staff, contractors and visitors stopped from lighting up.

Nicotine patches are other products will be made available and QUIT support programs rolled out to the 161 Bandyup inmates who smoke.

Tobacco products will be limited in the lead up to the October 31 deadline to stop stockpiling.

The harmful effects of smoking and its impact on those who inhale second-hand smoke is well-documented and this move is an opportunity for prisoners to quit and have a fresh start.

The prison watchdog, the Office of the Inspector of Custodial Services, estimates that 82 per cent of prisoners smoked, compared with 11 per cent of the free community.

The 2021 study found Aboriginal people, women and younger inmates were more likely to be smokers.

The ban would ensure jails comply with the Work Health and Safety Act 2021. It is understood there are five children staying at Bandyup with their mothers.

“The Bandyup Women’s Prison trial is part of the WA Government’s commitment to provide a healthy and safe environment for those in the care of, working or visiting custodial facilities,” Corrective Services Minister Bill Johnston said.

Corrective Services Minister Bill Johnston.
Camera IconCorrective Services Minister Bill Johnston. Credit: Kelsey Reid/The West Australian

“The harmful effects of smoking and its impact on those who inhale second-hand smoke is well-documented and this move is an opportunity for prisoners to quit and have a fresh start.

“WA and the ACT are the only Australian jurisdictions where smoking is allowed in prisons, with smoke-free policies successfully implemented everywhere else.

“We are taking a staged, cautious and considered approach to ensure a smoke-free Bandyup Women’s Prison.”

The Department of Justice is finalizing the schedule for bans in other facilities.

Tobacco will likely become sought-after contraband but the ban should reduce the number of fires lit deliberately by prisoners because of the availability of lighters and matches.

The move will be supported by the WA Prison officers Union, which has lobbied for the change.

In 2014 WorkSafe issued the Department of Corrective Services with an improvement notice, giving it until April 2015 to stop prisoners lighting up indoors.

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Categories
US

FBI Director Wray pushes back on threats following unprecedented raid on Trump: ‘Deplorable and dangerous’

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FBI Director Christopher Wray on Wednesday pushed back on social media threats made against him and other law enforcement officers, following his agency’s unprecedented search of former President Donald Trump’s Mar-a-Lago estate.

On Monday, the FBI executed a “raid” on Trump’s Florida home and by that night droves of social media posts criticized the incident and accused the bureau of being politicized in nature. Some messages also called for violence towards Wray, a massive uprising, and even a civil war.

“I’m always concerned about threats to law enforcement,” Wray said Wednesday, condemning the posts. “Violence against law enforcement is not the answer, no matter who you’re upset with.”

He called the threats “deplorable and dangerous.”

TRUMP FBI RAID: AGENTS SEIZE MAR-A-LAGO DOCUMENTS IN UNPRECEDENTED MOVE

The comments were made after a news conference at the agency’s field office in Omaha, Nebraska, where Wray provided comments about the FBI’s focus on cybersecurity.

At the presser, Wray declined to comment further or answer any questions about why FBI agents spent hours on Monday searching Trump’s Palm Beach, Florida resort. This was the first time in US history that the FBI has conducted such a search on the residence of a former president.

Since Monday, scores of messages have been seen on Twitter, Gab, and TRUTH Social calling for violence across the country.

Authorities monitoring these posts spotted a significant increase in death threats aimed toward Attorney General Merrick Garland, Wray, and FBI agents, sources told Fox News.

Both Garland and Wray travel with armed security.

A post on Gab said, “All it takes is one call. And millions will arm up and take back this country. It will be over in less than 2 weeks.”

Another said, “Lets get this started! This unelected, illegitimate regime crossed the line with their GESTAPO raid! It is long past time the lib socialist filth were cleansed from American society!”

FBI AGENTS, GARLAND AND WRAY SEE INCREASED DEATH THREATS AFTER TRUMP SEA-A-LAKE RAID: SOURCES

Trump and several top Republicans have demanded an answer from the FBI and the Justice Department on why the search was conducted and what property was seized.

“These are dark times for our Nation, as my beautiful home, Mar-a-Lago in Palm Beach, Florida, was raided, and occupied by a large group of FBI agents,” Trump said Tuesday in an email sent by Trump’s Save America political action committee.

“The country deserves a thorough and immediate explanation of what led to the events of Monday,” Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., said Tuesday. “Attorney General Garland and the Department of Justice should already have provided answers to the American people and must do so immediately.”

TRUMP DENOUNCES FBI FOR COURT-APPROVED MAR-A-LAGO RAID, AND GARLAND’S MAJOR MISTAKE

Republican Sen. Rand Paul said the “raid” could lead to Garland’s impeachment, should an investigation find he misused his office.

“Without question, I think the order to allow the raid on Mar-a-Lago on Trump’s house has to be revealed. It’s going to have to wait until November till there’s a full investigation,” Paul said on “Fox & Friends.” “And I’ve never been a fan of overusing impeachment, but I think there has to be an investigation. And if it warrants it, there’s going to have to be a look at whether or not the attorney general has misused his office for political purposes. Have they gone after a political opponent? I mean, this is beyond the pale.”

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“No one would have ever imagined before that we would be using or one political party would be using the FBI to attack their political opponents. Now, this is really something that’s going to require an investigation. And I wouldn’t be surprised if the investigation leads to abuse of power that this could even lead to an impeachment of the attorney general,” he added.

The raid was part of an investigation into whether Trump took classified documents to Mar-a-lago, according to people familiar with the matter.

Fox News’ David Spunt and the Associated Press contributed to this report.

Categories
Business

ALDI supermarket’s small trolleys arrive in Australian stores: first photo sends customers wild

The first photo of ALDI supermarket’s new small trolleys have been shared on social media, prompting an excited reaction from shoppers.

In June, the retail giant confirmed to 7NEWS.com.au that it will introduce smaller trolleys to customers in an effort to provide “greater convenience”.

In the past, ALDI has only offered large 212-litre carts – which are 1.1m high – for shoppers to use, attracting criticism.

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Some claimed that the “enormous” trolleys were unsuitable for elderly, pregnant and “short” people, saying they are “made for giants”.

In response, an ALDI Australia spokesperson revealed that the half-sized trolleys – which are popular at Coles and Woolworths – would be available in stores.

“We recognize that customers are looking for greater convenience when they visit our stores, as it’s almost impossible not to pick up the excellent value products on offer,” the spokesperson said.

A shopper shared a photo of the new small trolleys at one Australian ALDI store. Credit: Aldi Mums/Facebook

Woolworths shopper shares ‘childcare trolley’ hack on TikTok.

Woolworths shopper shares ‘childcare trolley’ hack on TikTok.

“That’s why we’re introducing smaller trolleys across all our locations, so our customers can more efficiently pick up products while doing smaller grocery shops.”

The first photo of the new trolleys appeared on the Aldi Mums Facebook page, sending fans wild.

“Yes I just used one. I was surprised to see them. A great addition,” said one.

Added another: “OMG yes! So hard when you’re a short person to lag around their big trolley!”

A third wrote: “Fantastic, no more tiptoes trying to get the bottom items out of trolley.”

One more said: “About time! For me, 144cm of shortness the trolleys are so big, almost climbing in every time! Well done ALDI for the newer half cart smaller trolleys.”

Another responded: “Thank goodness, I hurt my stomach every time I try to get goods from the bottom of the larger trolleys. I hope mine gets them very, very, very soon.”

The new trolleys come just months after ALDI confirmed that it was introducing hand baskets to all stores.

The 1.1m-high trolleys have attracted criticism from some users. Credit: 7NEWS.com.au

ALDI fans said they were excited to use the new smaller trolleys arrive in store.

“I am only 5’2” & feel like a child pushing an adult trolley,” said one.

Another added: “I fall in the all the time or I have to get my taller kids to get the stuff out. I’m only 5’2”!”

Write one more: “I’m a shorty, and very tired of bashing my boobs on the big trolleys!”

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