The newly formed Carroll County Department of Fire and Emergency Services submitted a request for permission to apply for the Assistance to the Firefighters Grant (AFG), a fire safety grant that funds resources for emergency personnel and is administered by the Federal Emergency Management Agency.
Maryland lawmakers introduced bills that would alter the school resource program this session, and although some counties are considering the program's removal, Carroll leaders, and some parents, want it to stay.
Carroll commissioners discuss environmental bills, county fire service, agriculture preservation capitalgazette.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from capitalgazette.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
See photos: Ames residents build snowmen, clean up after snowstorm
Ames Public Library opens late
The library announced Friday morning that it would open at 1 p.m. Friday due to weather.
Ames schools have remote learning day
The Ames Community School district is conducting the school day via online learning Friday. Grab and go meals will not be distributed.
City says stay home if possible
Streets are covered in Ames and wind is causing issues, the city tweeted Friday morning.
Parking ordinance in effect
The Ames snow ordinance went into effect at 10 p.m. Thursday.
Streets marked with red and white signs are designated snow routes. Vehicles must be moved off these streets until the snow has stopped and streets are completely plowed from curb to curb, according to a city news release.
How the Shady Zero-Day Sales Game Is Evolving
Zero-day vulns are cold, while access-as-a-service is hot. Here s how black market (and gray market) deals go down.
(Image: chanut via Adobe Stock)
One of the software success stories of the COVID-19 pandemic era has been videoconferencing service Zoom. Despite already existing in a crowded field of both startups and mature competitors, Zoom became a household name for anyone stuck at home to avoid the coronavirus. But as Zoom boomed, so did Dark Web sales of zero-day vulnerabilities in its software.
A Zoom vulnerability that allowed remote-code execution on Windows computers was allegedly for sale on the Dark Web for $500,000, reported Vice in April. Another zero-day vulnerability for Zoom on Macs confirmed by multiple sources commanded a lower but allegedly still substantial Dark Web price.