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Royal website subject to ‘denial of service attack’, royal source says
Royal website subject to ‘denial of service attack’, royal source says
The royal website was subject to a “denial of service attack”, a royal source has said. It was down for an hour-and-a-half on Sunday morning from 10am. A denial of service attack means the site was bombarded by traffic, which caused it to stop working, the source said. It is not the same as hacking, in which whoever is responsible actually gets into a website and the site is compromised. Neither the content nor the systems of the royal website were accessed on Sunday. It is currently unknown who is responsible for the cyber attack, the source said. The site is now up and running as usual. Read More Charity boss speaks out over ‘traumatic’ encounter with royal aide Ukraine war’s heaviest fight rages in east - follow live
2023-10-01 21:47
Dollar Baby: Why Stephen King Sells the Rights to His Work to Up-and-Coming Filmmakers for Just $1
Dollar Baby: Why Stephen King Sells the Rights to His Work to Up-and-Coming Filmmakers for Just $1
The Dollar Baby contract is Stephen King’s way of helping film students adapt his stories without financial barriers.
2023-10-01 20:23
UAE Oil Giant Doubles Carbon Capture Target Ahead of COP Summit
UAE Oil Giant Doubles Carbon Capture Target Ahead of COP Summit
The United Arab Emirates’ biggest oil producer is doubling its carbon-capture target as the company works toward a
2023-10-01 18:45
Climate Looms Large Over Middle East’s Biggest Oil Gathering
Climate Looms Large Over Middle East’s Biggest Oil Gathering
At the biggest Middle Eastern energy conference this week, oil won’t be top of the agenda. Ministers and
2023-10-01 14:28
Europe’s War on Carbon Goes Global as Border Tax Comes Into Play
Europe’s War on Carbon Goes Global as Border Tax Comes Into Play
The European Union has been accelerating its push to become the first climate-neutral continent. A new policy coming
2023-10-01 13:58
Video Games Releasing in October 2023
Video Games Releasing in October 2023
Alan Wake II, Just Dance 2024, and Sonic Superstars are only a few of the many titles coming in October.
2023-10-01 13:56
Indonesia Races to Extinguish Wildfires as Dry Season Hits Peak
Indonesia Races to Extinguish Wildfires as Dry Season Hits Peak
Firefighters are rushing to extinguish forest and land fires across parts of Indonesia, with the scorching weather in
2023-10-01 13:48
Aging Trees Show a Crisis Looms for the World’s Everything Oil
Aging Trees Show a Crisis Looms for the World’s Everything Oil
Across swathes of Southeast Asia, maturing palm oil trees, some as tall as a 12-storey building, are turning
2023-10-01 10:22
New York City's heavy rain is 'new normal' due to climate change, governor says
New York City's heavy rain is 'new normal' due to climate change, governor says
By Kanishka Singh (Reuters) -Torrential downpours after a week of mostly steady rainfall that brought flash flooding to New York
2023-10-01 02:23
Scientists now say finding alien life in the universe is 'only a matter of time'
Scientists now say finding alien life in the universe is 'only a matter of time'
Scientists are optimistic about the possibility of finding life on other planets. Nasa's James Webb Space Telescope (JWST) found a possible sign of a gas that, on Earth, is produced by simple marine organisms. It was detected this month in the atmosphere of a planet named K2-18b, which is 120 light years away. The planet is in what astronomers call ''the Goldilocks zone' - the right distance away from its star for the surface temperature to be neither too hot nor too cold, but just right for there to be liquid water, which is essential to support life. The team expects to know in a year's time whether the hints are confirmed or have gone away. "We live in an infinite Universe, with infinite stars and planets. And it's been obvious to many of us that we can't be the only intelligent life out there," Prof Catherine Heymans, Scotland's Astronomer Royal told the BBC. "We now have the technology and the capability to answer the question of whether we are alone in the cosmos." Prof Nikku Madhusudhan of the Institute of Astronomy at Cambridge University, who led the study, told the BBC that if the hints are confirmed "it would radically change the way we think about the search for life". "If we find signs of life on the very first planet we study, it will raise the possibility that life is common in the Universe." He predicted that within five years there will be "a major transformation" in our understanding of life in the Universe. If his team don't find life signs on K2-18b, they have 10 more Goldilocks planets on their list to study - and possibly many more after that. Even finding nothing would "provide important insights into the possibility of life on such planets", he said. Meanwhile there are other separate projects all looking for signs of life in the universe. Pretty exciting. Sign up to our free Indy100 weekly newsletter Have your say in our news democracy. Click the upvote icon at the top of the page to help raise this article through the indy100 rankings.
2023-09-30 23:28
Games-North Korea cheer weightlifting world record, Zhang wins tennis gold
Games-North Korea cheer weightlifting world record, Zhang wins tennis gold
By Ian Ransom HANGZHOU, China (Reuters) -North Korea's Ri Song Gum set a weightlifting world record at the Asian Games
2023-09-30 21:18
How South Africa Botched Its First Coal Power-Plant Transition
How South Africa Botched Its First Coal Power-Plant Transition
South Africa’s transition away from the dirtiest fossil fuel has been marred by the botched approach to the
2023-09-30 20:56
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