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Microsoft Office zero-day CVE-2026-21509: what the fast exploitation wave teaches defenders

Microsoft pushed an emergency, out-of-band patch for a Microsoft Office zero-day on January 26, and Ukraine’s national CERT says attackers moved fast to weaponize it. The case is a reminder of how narrow the window can be between “vulnerability is publicly acknowledged” and “campaigns are active in the wild,” especially when the targets are government […]

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Courts let US offshore wind construction resume: what the injunctions signal

A group of court decisions is allowing US offshore wind projects to resume construction after a sudden federal move to halt them. Ars Technica reports that judges who reviewed the government’s justification were not persuaded, and several injunctions are now blocking the construction stop while the underlying legal challenges proceed. Beyond the energy debate, this

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Notepad++ updater compromise: what happened and what users should do

Notepad++—a widely used Windows text editor—warned that its update infrastructure was compromised for months, enabling attackers to selectively redirect some users to malicious updates. Ars Technica reports the compromise began in June 2025 and that control wasn’t fully restored until December. This is a classic supply-chain pattern: instead of exploiting each victim directly, attackers target

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Hair samples over a century show how regulations cut lead exposure

Lead is one of those public-health hazards that became “normal” for decades, until regulation forced it out of everyday products. Ars Technica reports that researchers at the University of Utah analyzed hair samples spanning nearly a century and found lead concentrations fell roughly 100-fold—evidence that the phase-out of leaded gasoline and other lead controls did

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Raspberry Pi raises prices again as RAM shortages ripple outward

Raspberry Pi has announced another round of price increases, blaming higher memory costs as shortages spread beyond data centers and PC parts into embedded and hobbyist hardware. Ars Technica reports this is the company’s second broad hike in two months, with the steepest increases landing on the highest-RAM boards. It’s a reminder that “AI chip

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A judge ruled the DOE climate working group was illegal—here’s why that matters

A federal judge has ruled that the US Department of Energy’s “Climate Working Group” was formed unlawfully and that the government violated rules meant to keep advisory bodies balanced and transparent. Ars Technica reports that the lawsuit also forced disclosure of the group’s communications—emails that are now public. This kind of case can sound procedural,

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Malicious OpenClaw ‘skills’ are being used to spread password-stealing malware

A wave of malicious “skills” (plug-ins) targeting the local AI assistant OpenClaw has been used to deliver information-stealing malware, according to BleepingComputer. The packages were designed to look like helpful tools, but their setup instructions pushed victims into running commands that installed stealers. This is the familiar supply-chain story, adapted to a new ecosystem: when

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Intel’s Panther Lake laptop chips: why ‘Core Ultra Series 3’ is a reset

Intel’s laptop CPU roadmap has been confusing for years: one generation improves performance but hurts battery life, another improves graphics but stalls CPU gains, and feature support varies by sub-family. Ars Technica’s early look at Panther Lake (Core Ultra Series 3) argues it’s the first lineup in a while that feels like a clean, across-the-board

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Firefox is adding a single switch to disable all AI features

Mozilla says the next Firefox release will include a single settings toggle that blocks all AI “enhancements,” responding to users who want a clear way to opt out. BleepingComputer reports the feature arrives in Firefox 148, scheduled for February 24, and can disable both current and future generative-AI features from one place. This is an

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Guinea worm is close to eradication—here’s what made the last mile possible

Guinea worm disease is nearing global eradication, with only 10 human cases reported worldwide in 2025, according to figures cited by Ars Technica from the Carter Center. If the remaining transmission chains can be eliminated, Guinea worm would become only the second eradicated human disease after smallpox. Eradication is a very specific claim—it doesn’t mean

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