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WikiLeaks has published hundreds more files today which it claims show the CIA went to great lengths to disguise its own hacking attacks and point the finger at Russia, China, North Korea and Iran. The 676 files released today are part of WikiLeaks' Vault 7 tranche of files and they claim to give an insight into the CIA's Marble software, which can forensically disguise viruses, trojans and hacking attacks. WikiLeaks says the source code suggests Marble has test examples in Chinese, Russian, Korean, Arabic and Farsi (the Iranian language). WikiLeaks, founded by Julian Assange (pictured), claims its Vault 7 files come from the CIA's Center for Cyber Intelligence It says: 'This would permit a forensic attribution double game, for example by pretending that the spoken language of the malware creator was not American English, but Chinese.' This could lead forensic investigators into wrongly concluding that CIA hacks were carried out by the Kremlin, the Chinese government, Iran, North Korea or Arabic-speaking terror groups such as ISIS.
WASHINGTON โ The U.S. Army is permanently stationing an attack drone system and its support personnel in South Korea amid ongoing tensions with the North, a Pentagon spokesman said Monday. Officials said the deployment, due by next year, was not unique to South Korea and was being conducted across the Army to provide infantry divisions with better intelligence. But the announcement comes just one week after Pyongyang launched four ballistic missiles in its latest provocative test. "The U.S. Army, after coordination with the Republic of Korea Armed Forces and the U.S. Air Force, has begun the process to permanently station a Gray Eagle Unmanned Aerial Systems company at Kunsan Air Base, Republic of Korea," Pentagon spokesman Navy Capt. The sensor-rich MQ-1C Gray Eagle is capable of carrying Stinger and Hellfire missiles, as well as other armaments.
Stunning Cassini image appears to show Saturn's moon Mimas crashing into its giant rings (but NASA says its just an optical illusion) Mimas is actually 28,000 miles (45,000 kilometers) away from the rings The gravitational pull of Mimas creates waves in Saturn's rings that are visible in some Cassini images The gravitational pull of Mimas creates waves in Saturn's rings that are visible in some Cassini images Saturn's moon Mimas appears to be crashing through its rings - but it's just an optical illusion. NASA's Cassini spacecraft Mimas is actually 28,000 miles (45,000 kilometers) away from the rings. Santa ISN'T sexist if he gives your daughter a doll:... From reacting to a bad gift to buying the perfect present:... Why you shouldn't feed garden birds in spring: Putting out... The biggest map of our universe yet: Chart shows billions of... BlackBerry sets its sights on self driving cars: Firm... What is REALLY going on in North Korea? Santa ISN'T sexist if he gives your daughter a doll:... From reacting to a bad gift to buying the perfect present:... Why you shouldn't feed garden birds in spring: Putting out...
The Canadian firm is set to invest C$100 million ($75 million) in a new autonomous vehicle-testing hub over several years, the company's chief executive said on Monday, marking a change of direction for the smartphone pioneer. Apple is said to have taken the unusual step of working on its car software far away from its California HQ. QNX, which was bought out by Blackberry in 2010, is known for producing car software. What is REALLY going on in North Korea? 'Explosion' thought... From reacting to a bad gift to buying the perfect present:... Facebook Messenger FINALLY unveils group video calls that... Look up! FOUR asteroids are set to make a'close approach'... What is REALLY going on in North Korea?
The footage reveals a glimpse of North Korea's capital city, Pyongyang in May 2016 Numerous landmarks can be seen, including the Kim Il-Sung Stadium and Kumsusan Palace of the Sun Groups of people walking around the city, and cars driving on the streets can be seen in the footage The footage reveals a glimpse of North Korea's capital city, Pyongyang in May 2016 The video, taken by the Iris camera on May 30, provides a distant look at life behind the city walls, with sparse traffic and even pedestrians visible in the clips. How fusion reactors could change the world: Experts explain... Global warming scarred the surface of Mars: Deep canyons and... Why atheists appear so angry: Study finds their... Google's humanoid robot goes off road (and this time,... How fusion reactors could change the world: Experts explain... Global warming scarred the surface of Mars: Deep canyons and... Why atheists appear so angry: Study finds their... Google's humanoid robot goes off road (and this time,... The Kumsusan Palace of the Sun can be seen in the footage as well. 'The world doesn't get many peeks behind North Korea's walls, nor at its capital city, Pyongyang,' Theras A. Gordon Wood wrote in a UrtheCast blog post. Footage captured from the International Space Station has revealed a rare glimpse at North Korea's capital city, Pyongyang.
You can get a pretty good idea of a country's wealth by seeing how much it shines at night โ just compare the intense brightness of China and South Korea to the dark mass of North Korea that's sandwiched between them. But nighttime lights don't tell you which neighborhoods or villages within a large region are merely poor and which are home to people living in abject poverty. That's the level of detail policymakers need when they decide where to deploy their economic development programs. You could get that detail by sending legions of survey-takers into crowded slums and sparsely populated rural areas. But that would be hugely time-consuming and cost tens of millions of dollars or more.
The American-led U.N. command on Saturday dismissed as unsubstantiated accusations from North Korea that U.S. troops at a border village tried to provoke its frontline troops with "disgusting acts." It also said that American troops encouraged South Korean soldiers to aim their guns at the North. North Korea occasionally accuses South Korean and U.S. troops of trying to provoke its border troops and vice versa. After North Korea's first nuclear bomb test in 2006, the U.S. accused North Korean troops of spitting across the border's demarcation line, making throat-slashing hand gestures and flashing their middle fingers.
SEOUL/UNITED NATIONS โ The American-led U.N. command on Saturday dismissed accusations from North Korea that U.S. troops at a border village tried to provoke its front-line troops with "disgusting acts." A North Korean military statement Friday warned U.S. soldiers to stop what it called "hooliganism" at Panmunjom or they will meet a "dog's death any time and any place." It said U.S. troops pointed their fingers at North Korean soldiers and made strange noises and unspecified "disgusting" facial expressions. It also said American troops encouraged South Korean soldiers to aim their guns at the North. Christopher Bush, a spokesman for the U.N. command, said it had looked into the allegations and determined they were unsubstantiated.
North Korea on Friday accused U.S. soldiers of trying to provoke its frontline troops with "disgusting" acts and encouraging South Korean soldiers to aim their guns at the North. A North Korean military statement warned U.S. soldiers to stop what it called "hooliganism" at the inter-Korean border village of Panmunjom or they'll meet a "dog's death any time and any place." "GIs hurled fully armed MPs of the South Korean puppet army into perpetrating such dangerous provocations as aiming at" the North Korean military side last week, said the statement carried by Pyongyang's official Korean Central News Agency. It said U.S. troops pointed their fingers at North Korean soldiers and made strange noises and unspecified "disgusting" facial expressions. North Korea occasionally accuses South Korean and U.S. troops of trying to provoke its border troops and vice versa.