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Drivers Found Tricking Hands-Free Systems Will Be Fined $250


Drivers using illicit hands-free driving tech (and oranges) will face a $250 fine.
Advancements in driver assist technology and active safety systems have skyrocketed in recent years and crashworthiness standards set by safety authorities have become a lot more stringent, too. Subsequently, most, if not all, modern-day vehicles come comprehensively outfitted with these technologies from right off the factory floor. Though self-driving cars are still a distant ambition, the technology does exist and resides in many of America s modern vehicles. One such example is the Super Cruise function in the new Cadillac Escalade. Unfortunately, drivers have been working out ways to bypass or shut-off these driver attention systems and warnings that are meant to keep them driving carefully, but Arizona County won t have it, introducing a new Bill that stipulates fines of up to $250 for defeating these measures. ....

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Why Russia's massive cyberattack is especially insidious


Why Russia s massive cyberattack is especially insidious
Daniel Howley
President Donald Trump on Saturday downplayed the significance of a massive Russian cyberattack that continues to spread, touching everything from Cox Communications to an Arizona county to the U.S. agency that oversees the nation’s nuclear arsenal.
“The Cyber Hack is far greater in the Fake News Media than in actuality. I have been fully briefed and everything is well under control,” Trump tweeted.
However, experts say even more victims will likely emerge. Perhaps the most stunning part of the attack is that it was perpetrated using the very services designed to keep computer networks safe in the first place: system updates. The hackers did this by secretly implanting malicious code into software updates, then activating the code to launch the attacks weeks later to further cover their tracks. ....

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