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News for nerds, stuff that matters

CEOs Want Tariff Refunds As Earnings Take a Hit

Companies including Philips and Pandora say they plan to seek tariff reimbursements after the Supreme Court ruled Trump's sweeping duties illegal, with the U.S. potentially facing up to $175 billion in refunds. Many firms say tariffs hurt earnings, but CFO survey results suggest companies applying for refunds are unlikely to pass savings back to consumers through lower prices. CNBC reports: Companies across Europe are flagging disruption from tariffs as a factor contributing to a skewed earnings picture. "We will ask for a rebate of tariffs in line with the government policies," Roy Jakobs, CEO of healthtech firm Philips, told CNBC's "Squawk Box Europe" on Wednesday morning. "We have been saying that of course we prefer a world without tariffs, without trade barriers, because we want to serve patients." Philips included the cost of tariffs within its full-year guidance and did not assume the impact from any potential refunds. Danish jeweler Pandora also announced its intention to apply for a rebate on Wednesday, with CEO Berta de Pablos-Barbier telling CNBC that tariffs were a "headwind" to earnings in the first quarter. "We have no news yet, so we cannot count on any of that refund," she told CNBC's "Squawk Box Europe." "Let's wait and see."

De Pablos-Barbier noted that the biggest factor impacting Pandora's profit this quarter is the cost of silver, which more than quadrupled in the last 18 months. She reiterated the firm's pivot from pure silver to platinum as a way of reducing costs. BMW, Daimler, Renishaw, Smith & Nephew and Continental all flagged tariffs as negatively impacting results in a slew of earnings updates on Wednesday, but the companies did not say whether they are applying for rebates. Businesses often bear some of the cost of tariffs, with some costs passing on to consumers through price hikes. Tariffs have had an overall inflationary impact on the economy, economists have told CNBC.

Despite the refund process potentially covering more than 330,000 importers on roughly 53 million entries, per court documents, consumers are unlikely to benefit, according to the results of the latest CNBC CFO Council quarterly survey. Twelve of the 25 chief financial officers interviewed said their company plans to apply for tariff refunds, however, none intend to lower prices in response.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Microsoft Issues Warning About Linux 'Copy Fail' Vulnerability

joshuark shares a report from Linux Magazine: Microsoft has issued a warning that a vulnerability with a CVSS score of 7.8 has been found in the Linux kernel. The vulnerability in question is tagged CVE-2026-31431 and, according to the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency (CISA), "This Linux Kernel Incorrect Resource Transfer Between Spheres Vulnerability is a frequent attack vector for malicious cyber actors and poses significant risks to the federal enterprise."

The distributions affected are Ubuntu, Red Hat, SUSE, Debian, Fedora, Arch Linux, and Amazon Linux. This could also affect any distribution based on those in the list, which means pretty much every Linux distro that isn't independent. The flaw is found in the Linux kernel cryptographic subsystem's algif_aead module of AF_ALG. The problem is that a particular optimization has led to the kernel reusing the source memory as the destination during cryptographic operations. What this means is that attackers can take advantage of interactions between the AF_ALG socket interface and a splice() system call. Until patches are released, Microsoft is advising that the affected crypto feature should be disabled, or AF_ALG socket creation should be blocked. The vulnerability is also known as "Copy Fail," which has been shared on Slashdot and detailed in a technical report. The vulnerability affects almost every version of the Linux OS and is now being exploited in the wild. U.S. cybersecurity agency CISA has ordered all civilian federal agencies to patch any affected systems by May 15.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

The Guardian

Latest news, sport, business, comment, analysis and reviews from the Guardian, the world's leading liberal voice

US-Iran ceasefire under threat after exchange of strikes in strait of Hormuz

Donald Trump says the ceasefire remains in place despite the strikes, with Iranian TV saying the situation is ‘back to normal’

The United States and Iran exchanged fire late on Thursday in the most serious test yet of their month-long ceasefire.

Iran accused the US of violating the ceasefire by targeting two ships at the strait of Hormuz and attacking civilian areas, as the US insisted it struck in retaliation.

Continue reading...

Premier League: 10 things to look out for this weekend

A game to suit departing Stones, West Ham’s Pablo under scrutiny against Arsenal and Maddison can rouse Spurs

Liverpool have eased one self-inflicted headache by listening to their fans and scrapping plans to raise some ticket prices for the next three seasons. Anfield’s attention can now focus squarely on eradicating another as Arne Slot’s side seek to salvage a desperately poor season with Champions League qualification. Liverpool will secure a top-five finish should they beat Chelsea and Bournemouth fail to win at Fulham. Slot could not have hand-picked a better opponent to potentially complete the job than the shambles that is this Chelsea team, even taking into account his frontline injury-list. The visitors are a collection of individual egos who turn up when they feel like it, which is Wembley and the FA Cup on current evidence. Chelsea have lost seven successive league games only once in their history – from November to December 1952 – but could equal that unwanted record with defeat at Anfield. They have lost their last two away matches by a three-goal margin, conceded at least three times in four of their last five league games, and it would surprise no one if they decide to save themselves for the FA Cup final. Andy Hunter

Liverpool v Chelsea, Saturday 12.30pm (all times BST)

Brighton v Wolves, Saturday 3pm

Fulham v Bournemouth, Saturday 3pm

Sunderland v Manchester United, Saturday 3pm

Continue reading...

UK schools should remove pupils’ online photos as AI blackmail threat grows, say experts

Criminals are manipulating pictures found on school websites and social media to create sexually explicit images

UK schools should remove pictures of pupils’ faces from their websites and social media accounts because blackmailers are using them to create sexually explicit images, experts have said.

Child safety experts and the UK’s National Crime Agency (NCA) warn that criminals are using AI to manipulate photos of children and then demand cash not to publish them.

Continue reading...

Aston Villa must prove they are not the ‘nearly men’ in Istanbul, warns McGinn

  • Villa thrash Forest to reach Europa League final

  • ‘We didn’t want to leave these games with regrets’

John McGinn said Aston Villa took a giant step towards proving they are not “nearly men” after securing their spot in a first European final since 1982 in front of Prince William, who afterwards joined the players in the dressing room.

Villa’s captain scored twice late on as Villa romped to a 4-0 Europa League semi-final second-leg win over Nottingham Forest to maintain Unai Emery’s hopes of a record fifth title in the competition. Villa will face Freiburg in Istanbul on 20 May.

Continue reading...

The Register

Biting the hand that feeds IT — Enterprise Technology News and Analysis

Mozilla boasts Mythos boosted Firefox bug cull

Mozilla fixed 423 Firefox security bugs in April, a repair rate more than five times higher than the 76 fixes issued in March and almost 20 times higher than its 21.5 monthly average last year. The browser maker previously said Anthropic's ballyhooed Mythos Preview model found 271 of these in Firefox 150. Now, a trio of technical types has come forward to provide a bit more detail about what Mythos (and its less storied sibling Opus 4.6) actually found. But they also highlight something that may matter more than the model: the agentic harness – the middleware mediating between AI and the end user. Brian Grinstead, Firefox distinguished engineer, Christian Holler, Firefox tech lead, and Frederik Braun, head of the Firefox security team, observe that over the past few months, AI-generated security reports have gone from slop to rather more tasty. They attribute the transformation to better models and development of better ways of harnessing those models – steering them in a way that increases the ratio of signal to noise. But they also appear to be aware that there's some skepticism in the security community about Mythos. So they've decided to publicize selected wins in an effort to encourage others to jump aboard the AI bug remediation train. "Ordinarily we keep detailed bug reports private for several months after shipping fixes and issuing security advisories, largely as a precaution to protect any users who, for whatever reason, were slow to update to the latest version of Firefox," they said. "Given the extraordinary level of interest in this topic and the urgency of action needed throughout the software ecosystem, we’ve made the calculated decision to unhide a small sample of the reports behind the fixes we recently shipped." The post links to a dozen Firefox bugs with varying degrees of severity. The list includes, for example, a 20-year-old heap use-after-free bug (high severity) that a web page could trigger using the XSLTProcessor DOM API without any user interaction. Many of these bugs are sandbox escapes, they note, which are difficult to find using techniques like fuzzing. AI analysis, they say, helps provide broader security coverage. And they add that it has helped validate prior browser hardening work designed to prevent prototype pollution attacks – audit logs showed AI models making unsuccessful exploitation attempts using this technique. Following Anthropic's announcement of Project Glasswing – a program for companies to gain early access to Mythos because it's touted as too dangerous for public release – security experts expressed skepticism. For example, Davi Ottenheimer, president of security consultancy flyingpenguin, wrote in an April 13 blog post, "The supposedly huge Anthropic 'step change' appears to be little more than a rounding error. The threat narrative so far appears to be ALL marketing and no real results. The Glasswing consortium is regulatory capture dressed up poorly as restraint." He subsequently ran a test in which he strapped Anthropic's lesser models Sonnet 4.6 and Haiku 4.5 into a harness called Wirken with an auditing skill called Lyrik. The result was eight findings in two minutes at a cost of about $0.75, Ottenheimer claims, noting that two of the eight matched bugs Mythos had identified. Other security folk have also reported that bug hunting and exploit development can be quite productive with off-the-shelf models like Opus 4.6, which among other virtues costs about 5x less than Mythos. In an email to The Register, Ottenheimer said, "There's a fundamental philosophical failure in the Mozilla post. A reading and a measurement are not the same thing. I don't see a measurement, but they seem to want us to believe we're looking at one. "When they give us the 'behind the scenes math' it's circular, a trick. 'Mythos found 271 bugs' is what Mythos found, not what other tools could not find against the same code. Why leave it as an assumption if it can be proven?" Ottenheimer said Mozilla advocates that every project adopt a similar approach without proving the merits of that approach. "It's like saying if you don't drink Coca-Cola, you can't run a mile under six minutes, because that's what a guy sponsored by Coca-Cola just did," he said. "The bar moves on rhetoric, marketing, not proper evidence. That is the capture crew again." He notes that the merits of Mythos might be more convincing if Mozilla had reported they couldn't do this work without Mythos. And since they're not saying that, he suggests, it's worth asking why there's no transparent comparison of Mythos to other models. He points to Mozilla's admission that Opus 4.6 was already identifying "an impressive amount of previously unknown vulnerabilities." "Mozilla never quantifies what Opus 4.6 [did] before saying what Mythos added," he said. "So 271 attributed to Mythos doesn't fit the analysis. And there's a deeper reveal when they say 'we dramatically improved our techniques for harnessing these models.' The improvement may be entirely in the harness, not as much in the model. This maps to my own experience. A nail gun has advantages over the hammer, yet without being in the right hands the outputs are as bad or worse." ®

Rotterdam - FediMeteo (@rotterdam@nl.fedimeteo.com)

Weer voor de stad Rotterdam Deze bot wordt beheerd door het FediMeteo-project. Voor informatie en contact kunt u de pagina https://fedimeteo.com raadplegen.

Weer voor Rotterdam 🌕 - 08-05-2026 01:15 CEST...

Weer voor Rotterdam 🌕 - 08-05-2026 01:15 CEST

In één oogopslag:
• 13.1°C · Licht bewolkt 🌕 | Min 8.6°C / Max 17.5°C

Verwachting voor vandaag:
• Min 8.6°C, Max 17.5°C (Bewolkt) ☁️, 🧭 1017.8 hPa ↗️ +0.5 hPa/24h, Windsnelheid: 12.6 km/u (3.5 m/s), richting: ↓ 4°

Uurlijkse voorspelling voor de komende 12 uur:

02:00: 12.6°C (Helder) 🌕, 🧭 1017.3 hPa ➡️ 0.0 hPa/1h, Windsnelheid: 8.6 km/u (2.4 m/s), richting: ↙ 55°
03:00: 11.5°C (Helder) 🌕, 🧭 1017.2 hPa ➡️ 0.0 hPa/1h, Windsnelheid: 9.4 km/u (2.6 m/s), richting: ← 95°
04:00: 10.8°C (Helder) 🌕, 🧭 1017.3 hPa ➡️ 0.0 hPa/1h, Windsnelheid: 9.0 km/u (2.5 m/s), richting: ← 104°
05:00: 10.3°C (Helder) 🌕, 🧭 1017.1 hPa ➡️ 0.0 hPa/1h, Windsnelheid: 9.0 km/u (2.5 m/s), richting: ← 103°
06:00: 10.1°C (Bewolkt) ☁️, 🧭 1017.1 hPa ➡️ 0.0 hPa/1h, Windsnelheid: 9.7 km/u (2.7 m/s), richting: ← 104°
07:00: 10.2°C (Licht bewolkt) 🌤️, 🧭 1017.3 hPa ➡️ 0.0 hPa/1h, Windsnelheid: 9.4 km/u (2.6 m/s), richting: ← 101°
08:00: 11.1°C (Gedeeltelijk bewolkt) ⛅, 🧭 1017.7 hPa ➡️ 0.0 hPa/1h, Windsnelheid: 9.0 km/u (2.5 m/s), richting: ← 99°
09:00: 12.6°C (Gedeeltelijk bewolkt) ⛅, 🧭 1018.0 hPa ➡️ 0.0 hPa/1h, Windsnelheid: 8.6 km/u (2.4 m/s), richting: ← 93°
10:00: 14.2°C (Zonnig) ☀️, 🧭 1018.3 hPa ➡️ 0.0 hPa/1h, Windsnelheid: 10.4 km/u (2.9 m/s), richting: ← 92°
11:00: 15.8°C (Licht bewolkt) 🌤️, 🧭 1018.3 hPa ➡️ 0.0 hPa/1h, Windsnelheid: 10.1 km/u (2.8 m/s), richting: ← 91°
12:00: 17.1°C (Bewolkt) ☁️, 🧭 1018.4 hPa ➡️ 0.0 hPa/1h, Windsnelheid: 9.4 km/u (2.6 m/s), richting: ← 79°
13:00: 18.1°C (Bewolkt) ☁️, 🧭 1018.3 hPa ➡️ 0.0 hPa/1h, Windsnelheid: 8.6 km/u (2.4 m/s), richting: ← 75°

Voorspelling voor de komende dagen:

zaterdag 09 mei: Min 10.1°C, Max 19.5°C (Bewolkt) ☁️, 🧭 1018.2 hPa ➡️ 0.0 hPa/24h, Windsnelheid: 18.4 km/u (5.1 m/s), richting: ↙ 67°
zondag 10 mei: Min 11.1°C, Max 22.2°C (Bewolkt) ☁️, 🧭 1014.6 hPa ↘️ -3.6 hPa/24h, Windsnelheid: 18.4 km/u (5.1 m/s), richting: ↙ 53°
maandag 11 mei: Min 8.2°C, Max 18.1°C (Bewolkt) ☁️, Kans op neerslag 6%, 🧭 1012.7 hPa ↘️ -1.9 hPa/24h, Windsnelheid: 19.2 km/u (5.3 m/s), richting: ↙ 35°
dinsdag 12 mei: Min 6.5°C, Max 13.1°C (Lichte motregen) 🌦️, Neerslag 0.3 mm, Kans op neerslag 9%, 🧭 1016.1 hPa ↗️ +3.4 hPa/24h, Windsnelheid: 15.7 km/u (4.4 m/s), richting: ↓ 354°
woensdag 13 mei: Min 7.7°C, Max 14.9°C (Lichte motregen) 🌦️, Neerslag 0.2 mm, Kans op neerslag 5%, 🧭 1005.5 hPa ↘️ -10.6 hPa/24h, Windsnelheid: 16.5 km/u (4.6 m/s), richting: → 267°
donderdag 14 mei: Min 9.2°C, Max 14.8°C (Matige motregen) 🌦️, Neerslag 5.5 mm, Kans op neerslag 38%, 🧭 1001.7 hPa ↘️ -3.8 hPa/24h, Windsnelheid: 16.8 km/u (4.7 m/s), richting: ↗ 246°

Details:
• 🌡️ Huidige temperatuur (om 01:15): 13.1°C (Licht bewolkt)
• 🤚 Gevoelstemperatuur: 10.2°C (-2.9°C)
• 💨 Windsnelheid: 9.7 km/u (2.7 m/s), richting: ↙ 45°
• 🌬️ Windstoten: 18.0 km/h (5.0 m/s)
• 💧 Luchtvochtigheid: 62%
• 🧭 Luchtdruk: 1017.3 hPa ➡️ 0.0 hPa/3h
• 👁️ Zichtbaarheid: 24.2 km
• ☀️ UV-index: 0.0
• 🌅 Zonsopgang: 06:01 · 🌇 Zonsondergang: 21:15

Luchtkwaliteit:
• AQI: 37 🟢 (Goed)
• PM2.5: 9.7 μg/m³
• PM10: 15.4 μg/m³

Gegevens geleverd door Open-Meteo



After the All-Nighter

hiroya.uga has added a photo to the pool:

After the All-Nighter

The sunrise that burned into my tired eyes after pulling an all-nighter. The whole office was glowing red.

In the fullness of time. Happy Fence Friday

John from Brisbane has added a photo to the pool:

In the fullness of time. Happy Fence Friday

The massive expanse of the Glasshouse Mountains, north of Brisbane was once an even more massive shield volcano. Humans really have no comprehension of the billions of years needed to erode it into what we know today, a series of majestic and unusually shaped volcanic plugs surrounded by coastal plain where rich red soil grows pineapples, avos, macadamias and many other fruits and vegetables.

The mountains are also alluring to climbers but always dangerous and every year, sadly, a number lose their lives in pursuit of the adventure. In fact, we lost two very recently.

My wife often "sees" photo opportunities that I miss or dismiss so this is her contribution to Fence Friday, an expansive shot from one of the lookouts in the area.

The tallest mountain in view is Tibrogargan, from some angles looking like a giant Gorilla. It is also quite steep and it is on this one on which the recent life losses occurred.