technology:atm

  • Crypto companies move to Greener Pastures due to Overbearing Regulations
    https://hackernoon.com/crypto-companies-move-to-greener-pastures-due-to-overbearing-regulations

    Recently, I wrote about the shutdown of stablecoin, Basis. Like many other projects, Basis was impacted by the #sec’s latest guidance. But instead of trying to wade through the bureaucracy and sacrifice their principles, Basis’ founders decided to abandon the entire project and walk away from the $133 million they had worked hard to raise from investors.Commenting on the increasingly stifling regulations on crypto-related businesses, I suggested that companies should go where they’re wanted. Surprise, surprise, that’s exactly what we’re seeing more projects do.Just recently Lamassu, the world’s oldest #bitcoin ATM manufacturer, moved its business to Switzerland in order to operate in a more crypto-friendly regulatory environment. But this move had nothing to do with the SEC’s attempts to (...)

    #jurisdiction #cryptocurrency #cryptocurrency-news

  • Remittance & Blockchain — Match Made In Heaven ?
    https://hackernoon.com/remittance-blockchain-match-made-in-heaven-5f5ad8500a2?source=rss----3a8

    Remittance & Blockchain — Match Made In Heaven?Remittance is the transfer of money from a migrant worker to someone back in their home country. People have always moved in search of better work prospects in high-income (or high currency value as compared to home) countries. Based on the World Migration Report 2018, there are currently an estimated 244 million international migrants living in other countries. This number has either directly or indirectly contributed to the global remittance’s $689 billion dollar industry with India being top of the pile, contributing $80 Billion or 11.6% of its entirety. The global remittance industry is expected to grow by more than 3% in 2019.Traditional Remittance MarketCompanies such as Western Union and MoneyGram come to mind when we talk about (...)

    #atm-services #moneyfi #blockchain-technology #remittance-blockchai #remittances

  • What consumer DNA data can and can’t tell you about disease risk | Science News
    https://www.sciencenews.org/article/health-dna-genetic-testing-disease

    False alarm
    A clinical lab checked worrisome results that people received from consumer DNA testing companies. Of the variants flagged as harmful, 40 percent were false positives. All but one of the bad calls were in cancer risk genes: BRCA1, BRCA2, TP53, CHEK2, MLH1 and ATM.

    Risks explained
    Customers of 23andMe who want to unlock information on their breast cancer risk must click through several screens of information before learning the result. This screen explains that risk goes beyond the three variants reported.

  • Ethereum : nouveau casse sans arme, ni violence de 30 millions de dollars

    http://www.zdnet.fr/actualites/ethereum-nouveau-casse-sans-arme-ni-violence-de-30-millions-de-dollars-3985524 #cryptomonnaie

    Sécurité : La société britannique Parity, qui édite un client pour les utilisateurs d’ #Ethereum, a annoncé qu’une faille avait été détectée dans certaines versions de ses porte-monnaie. Un #cybercriminel s’est servi de cette vulnérabilité afin de dérober l’équivalent de 30 millions de dollars en ether.

    via https://diasp.eu/p/5773163

    • A hacker stole $31M of Ether — how it happened, and what it means for Ethereum

      https://medium.freecodecamp.org/a-hacker-stole-31m-of-ether-how-it-happened-and-what-it-means-f

      [...]

      Around 12:00 PST, an unknown attacker exploited a critical flaw in the Parity multi-signature wallet on the Ethereum network, draining three massive wallets of over $31,000,000 worth of Ether in a matter of minutes. Given a couple more hours, the hacker could’ve made off with over $105,000,000 from vulnerable wallets.

      But someone stopped them.

      Having sounded the alarm bells, a group of benevolent white-hat hackers from the Ethereum community rapidly organized. They analyzed the attack and realized that there was no way to reverse the thefts, yet many more wallets were vulnerable. Time was of the essence, so they saw only one available option: hack the remaining wallets before the attacker did.

      By exploiting the same vulnerability, the white-hats hacked all of the remaining at-risk wallets and drained their accounts, effectively preventing the attacker from reaching any of the remaining $77,000,000.

      Yes, you read that right.

      To prevent the hacker from robbing any more banks, the white-hats wrote software to rob all of the remaining banks in the world. Once the money was safely stolen, they began the process of returning the funds to their respective account holders. The people who had their money saved by this heroic feat are now in the process of retrieving their funds.

      It’s an extraordinary story, and it has significant implications for the world of cryptocurrencies.

      It’s important to understand that this exploit was not a vulnerability in Ethereum or in #Parity itself. Rather, it was a vulnerability in the default smart contract code that the Parity client gives the user for deploying multi-signature wallets.

      [...]

      Most programmers today are trained on the web development model. Unfortunately, the blockchain security model is more akin to the older model.

      In blockchain, code is intrinsically unrevertible. Once you deploy a bad smart contract, anyone is free to attack it as long and hard as they can, and there’s no way to take it back if they get to it first. Unless you build intelligent security mechanisms into your contracts, if there’s a bug or successful attack, there’s no way to shut off your servers and fix the mistake. Being on Ethereum by definition means everyone owns your server.

      A common saying in cybersecurity is “attack is always easier than defense.” Blockchain sharply multiplies this imbalance. It’s far easier to attack because you have access to the code of every contract, know how much money is in it, and can take as long as you want to try to attack it. And once your attack is successful, you can potentially steal all of the money in the contract.

      Imagine that you were deploying software for vending machines. But instead of a bug allowing you to simply steal candy from one machine, the bug allowed you to simultaneously steal candy from every machine in the world that employed this software. Yeah, that’s how blockchain works.

      In the case of a successful attack, defense is extremely difficult. The white-hats in the Parity hack demonstrated how limited their defense options were — there was no way to secure or dismantle the contracts, or even to hack back the stolen money; all they could do was hack the remaining vulnerable contracts before the attacker did.

      This might seem to spell a dark future.

      But I don’t think this is a death knell for blockchain programming. Rather, it confirms what everyone already knows: this ecosystem is young and immature. It’s going to take a lot of work to develop the training and discipline to treat smart contracts the way that banks treat their ATM software. But we’re going to have to get there for blockchain to be successful in the long run.

      This means not just programmers maturing and getting more training. It also means developing tools and languages that make all of this easier, and give us rigorous guarantees about our code.

      It’s still early. Ethereum is a work in progress, and it’s changing rapidly. You should not treat Ethereum as a bank or as a replacement for financial infrastructure. And certainly you should not store any money in a hot wallet that you’re not comfortable losing.

      [...]

      via https://diasp.eu/posts/5775397

  • Palestinians flock to first Palestinian bank in Jerusalem
    http://www.al-monitor.com/pulse/originals/2017/05/palestine-the-national-bank-branch-jerusalesm-first-1967.html

    Haj Ali indicated the bank decided to open the new branch due to the longstanding lack of services for the Palestinian residents of Jerusalem, pointing out that many Palestinian Jerusalemites have been forced to deal with Israeli banks, as they had no other option in the absence of a Palestinian alternative.

    As for the economic outcome expected from this step, he said the branch will contribute to financing the residents’ small- and medium-sized projects, which could curb unemployment and poverty.

    He also noted that TNB launched a program to empower women economically by granting loans that will enable women to achieve their ambitions and projects, which could directly improve households’ income and help integrate Jerusalemite women into the labor market, pointing out that the poverty rate among Arabs has reached about 53%, according to 2016 statistics by the National Insurance Institute of Israel.

    He said loans and financial aid will empower Jerusalemites to survive life crises with a better quality of life, which would encourage them to remain in Jerusalem and claim their right to the land.

    Haj Ali asserted that the residents of Jerusalem and its environs have substantial financial and banking needs. “They are in dire need of Palestinian banks to meet these needs. The residents of Jerusalem had to travel for several hours and cross Israeli checkpoints to reach Palestinian banks in the Palestinian territories for a simple financial transaction that would have taken them few minutes if a branch existed on the Israeli side. Since the opening, customers have been flocking to open accounts, although the branch did not resort to any advertising activity.”

    He said the branch’s ATM is connected to the Palestinian national monetary system and customers of other Palestinian banks can use it; he said opening a TNB branch will facilitate the opening of branches of other Palestinian banks.

  • Internet laws a time-bomb | Bangkok Post: opinion
    http://www.bangkokpost.com/opinion/opinion/993937/internet-laws-a-time-bomb

    The military regime continues to create deeper digital confusion. It refuses to jettison its campaign for a single internet gateway that would out-firewall the “great firewall of China”. Now it seeks official authorisation to legally and secretly intercept all internet traffic. This amendment to the military’s poorly conceived Computer Crime Act (CCA) is sailing through the appointed National Legislative Assembly (NLA).

    The revelation about this bill is a huge disappointment, and not just to those who are intensely focused on civil rights. The proposed changes to the CCA are important on several levels: they will authorise any state security agency to gather details like the login and password of every citizen who does online banking. It will allow them to intercept the business dealings of every company with an online presence, even their in-house emails.

    The planned amendments, slated to become law next month, do not stop there. They specifically require ISPs to allow the state security apparatus full access to the internet traffic of their clients. Further, the ISPs will be gagged, with heavy penalties for any who blow the whistle on the state’s prying. Even if an ISP knows that state officials are intercepting highly personal details, such as online ATM transactions or business secrets, they are forbidden from revealing this rights abuse.

    #Thailande #censure #internet

  • Eye Scan Therefore I am: The Individualization of Humanitarian Aid

    The iris of an eye is surely one of the most individual parts of a person – a unique signifier of each one of us. Today, Syrian refugees standing at ATM machines in Jordan are being recognized by iris scanning technology so they can withdraw UN #cash that enables their families to survive another month.

    https://iow.eui.eu/2015/03/15/eye-scan-therefore-i-am-the-individualization-of-humanitarian-aid
    #aide_humanitaire #individualisation #réfugiés #asile #migrations #Jordanie #surveillance (?) #iris #aid_in_cash #cash_based_intervention #monétisation

    • Sur l’#aide_en_cash :
      Aide en cash, une analyse de Gilles Carbonnier

      Alors qu’en Suisse, le législateur et les autorités fédérales mettent tout en œuvre pour étendre au maximum l’aide « en nature » pour les demandeurs d’asile, en particulier dans la mise en place de la restructuration de la loi sur l’asile, une approche inverse a été déployée par les organisations humanitaires pour soutenir les Syriens réfugiés au Liban, en Turquie ou en Jordanie. L’expérience avait déjà été faite, mais jamais à une telle échelle et sur une telle durée, explique le Pr Gilles Carbonnier, qui consacre un chapitre de son prochain livre Humanitarian Economics aux conditions de mise en place de ce mode d’aide au Liban, où il a mené une étude fin 2014. Plus d’un million de réfugiés reçoivent aujourd’hui une aide « cash ». Chaque mois, le montant d’assistance individuel est crédité sur une carte ATM avec laquelle les réfugiés peuvent retirer de l’argent quand ils le souhaitent. Coordonné par le HCR, le programme implique tant les agences onusiennes et des ONG de terrain que des acteurs privés locaux comme des banques libanaises et quelque 400 commerces agréés pour fournir des produits alimentaires et non alimentaires (1), dispersés dans tout le pays. Interview.

      http://asile.ch/2015/08/06/laide-en-cash-une-analyse-de-gilles-carbonnier

    • LIFE IN PARADISE un film de Roman Vital / 2013 / Suisse / 78’ / Primatoni Filmverleih / VOSTF ;
      Depuis que le gouvernement suisse a installé un centre de déportation pour les demandeurs d’asile rejetés dans le village montagnard idyllique de Valzeina, une personne sur quatre au village est un #immigrant clandestin.
      Le film montre la façon dont fonctionne la #politique d’asile suisse. Il témoigne de la manière dont nous, privilégiés du monde occidental, nous occupons des demandeurs d’asile et comment nos vies sont affectées par cela. Il donne à comprendre ce que signifie vivre en tant que demandeur d’asile rejeté au « paradis »
      http://www.cineman.ch/fr/movie/2013/LifeInParadiseIllegaleInDerNac


      http://www.comptoirdudoc.org/programmations/images-de-justice

    • @cdb_77 : Le lien entre le film « Life in Paradise » et les autres billets sur l’aide humanitaire en cash est tout à fait subjectif. J’ai répondu après avoir visité le site asile.ch. C’est le .ch qui m’a rappelé le film qui se passe à Valzeina. Ce village situé entre Davos et le Liechtenstein est sur la route des migrants. A l’issue du film j’étais vaguement mal à l’aise. La neutralité de la Suisse et Henri Dumont (fondateur suisse de la croix rouge) me laisse dubitatif. Ne dit-on pas : « boire en suisse ».
      L’association Vivre Ensemble - Service d’information et de documentation sur le droit d’asile - est surement utile pour les demandeurs d’asile. Dans le film, les gestionnaires du « centre de déportation » ( dixit la présentation du documentaire ) ont un air de dame patronnesse. De là à exporter ces bons sentiments en cash humanitaire ; je propose aux suisses de balayer devant leur porte avant d’aller faire le ménage en #Syrie,#Liban,#Turquie ou en #Jordanie.
      Pour ce qui est des territoires bombardés,le drapeau de la #croix rouge flotte sur la plupart des champs de ruines. On tire même sur les ambulances !
      Par contre j’ai pas bien compris l’utilité du scanner de l’iris pour retirer de l’argent à la tirette ??
      Surement une embrouille de suisse pour tracer l’argent plus facilement !
      http://www.monde-diplomatique.fr/carnet/2014-02-13-vote-suisse#nh6
      https://youtu.be/oMTLXg9bjSM


      [...]

      Humanitaire faut pas nous la faire !
      Si t’as pas de richesses, tu l’as au fond des fesses
      On bougera pas le petit doigt de pied, espèce de sous évolués
      T’avais pas remarqué, on aide que ceux qui peuvent faire de l’humanitaire pour nous !
      Pas de minerai ? Rien à piller ? Ils n’ont qu’à se démerder
      Comme dit Bernard Kouchner : « faut qu’l’humanitaire soit une bonne affaire ! »

      [...]
      Les Garçons Bouchers - Ecoute, petit frère - 1995 -Boucherie production

    • @vanderling... juste deux mots de réflexion...
      – « Ce village situé entre Davos et le Liechtenstein est sur la route des migrants. » —> non, ce village n’est pas situé sur la « route des migrants », qui d’ailleurs n’est pas UNE route, mais plusieurs...
      – Henri Dumont (fondateur suisse de la croix rouge) —> C’est Henri Dunand
      – « L’association Vivre Ensemble - Service d’information et de documentation sur le droit d’asile - est surement utile pour les demandeurs d’asile » —> L’association Vivre Ensemble, pour laquelle je travaille, ne se veut pas « utile » pour les demandeurs d’asile, c’est un service d’information et de documentation, qui vise plutôt le grand public...
      – « je propose aux suisses de balayer devant leur porte avant d’aller faire le ménage en #Syrie,#Liban,#Turquie ou en #Jordanie » —> je le propose aussi aux Français, aux Allemands, aux Anglais, etc etc. Ce n’est pas parce qu’on vient d’un pays qu’on ne peut pas en critiquer un autre, surtout si on critique aussi le sien...
      – « Par contre j’ai pas bien compris l’utilité du scanner de l’iris pour retirer de l’argent à la tirette ??
      Surement une embrouille de suisse pour tracer l’argent plus facilement ! » —> l’idée de l’ « aide en cash » et celle de l’iris ne vient pas de la Suisse...

      J’ai un peu l’impression qu’on mélange des poires et des pommes...

    • Tracking Refugees With Biometrics: More Questions than Answers

      Samira stands looking diligently at the camera. At six years old, she is being enrolled in the first countrywide implementation of biometrics by the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees. Samira caught my eye because she is not a MAM — a military aged male — like the hundreds of Iraqis and Afghans I helped enroll in the U.S. military’s biometric efforts in those countries after 9/11.

      http://warontherocks.com/2016/03/tracking-refugees-with-biometrics-more-questions-than-answers

    • How cashless programmes to support refugees’ independence can restrict their freedoms

      The scale of 2015’s “refugee crisis” and the displacement of the Syrian population in the Middle East has led to a concerted effort to provide more practical and accessible financial support to migrants and asylum seekers along their journey to new host countries.

      To that end, humanitarian agencies are increasingly adopting technological solutions for managing refugees. In camps in Jordan and Lebanon particularly, the UN Refugee Agency (UNHCR) is implementing technological innovations and cash transfer mechanisms to make life easier for thousands of displaced people.

      At the same time, “refugee apps” devised by the likes of Apple and aid organisations have been used by migrants to make their own way to Europe and find help in the form of shelters, food banks, first aid points and legal support.

      Journalists, academics and NGOs have been examining the opportunities and risks associated with digital technologies and financial tools, such as cashless programmes that employ prepaid cards. While these things enable migrants to improve digital connectivity, get up-to-date information and have access to funds without banking, this same technology can be also used for tracking refugees and collecting useful data.

      Critically, my research focuses on a related issue that is not addressed in the current debate – how much these digital technologies and cash assistance programmes actually enhance the ability of refugees to live more independently.

      For instance, a 2017 UNHCR report states:

      There is growing evidence that cash assistance represents a highly effective form of aid by providing recipients with the autonomy and dignity to meet their own needs.

      But how is refugee autonomy regarded by the organisations that promote these digital technologies and “techno-humanitarian” innovations? How is it actually fostered and sustained? And is it of genuine benefit to refugees?
      Financial independence

      Greece is the first EU country in which the European Commission implemented a cashless system for asylum seekers. In 2016, in cooperation with the UNHCR, the EU launched a Refugee Cash Assistance Programme. Under this system, asylum seekers are entitled to monthly financial support of between €90 and €150 per person. The UNHCR delivers the cards to the islands across all refugee camps and accommodation centres, and they can be used to get cash from ATMs.

      Cash assistance programmes grant refugees flexibility in terms of buying products and services and are designed to help people feel they have control over their lives, even if they find themselves stranded somewhere facing an uncertain future.

      But restrictions apply. Only asylum seekers who accept accommodation provided by the UNHCR or the Greek authorities are entitled to this financial support. But some asylum seekers prefer to live in the solidarity of an unofficial refugee centre such as the disused City Plaza Hotel in Athens – but this means they are excluded from the cash assistance programme as it is not recognised by the authorities.

      The UNHCR checks each month that asylum seekers who hold a pre-paid card do actually live in the camps or apartments they have been allocated. The monthly top-up of cards is also subjected to a series of disciplinary rules that migrants are requested to comply with on a daily basis in refugee camps (such as having their card blocked if they are deemed to “abuse” the electricity in their accommodation).

      In the summer of 2018, 120 asylum seekers in Athens occupied the building where UNCHR prepaid cards are distributed for more than a month, demanding “cash cards for all”. Most had been suspended or excluded from the programme because they were not living in the accommodation provided by the authorities.

      The protest over the cards was a catalyst for other claims – including a request to abolish the Skype system to book appointments for lodging an asylum application, which became compulsory in Greece in 2016. In this case, technology was an obstacle to getting access to rights. And in this way, migrants who want to live as independently as possible are excluded from financial help and support.
      Autonomy vs freedom

      Promoting refugee autonomy is seen as a temporary situation that grants flexibility and treats them as “beneficiaries”, but is actually a system that is subject to restrictions, conditions and disciplinary procedures. Pre-paid cards are seen as digital tools that improve migrants’ conditions. But the reality for many asylum seekers on the Greek islands is that they have been stranded for months – some of them more than a year – due to the “geographical restrictions” imposed by the EU-Turkey Deal.

      This deals states that migrants who land on Greek islands and claim asylum must await the response to their application and cannot transfer to mainland Greece or Turkey unless they are deemed highly vulnerable. At a refugee centre on Lesbos, an Afghani man told me: “We are all going crazy here – our mental health is as precarious as our physical health on this island”.

      The prepaid cards are of course beneficial to migrants stuck on the Greek islands, but these are extremely vulnerable people whose protracted time there and lack of appropriate psychological and medical support continues to exacerbate their vulnerability – ironically, the one way they can be transferred to the mainland.

      A growing debate points to the need to enhance and support refugees’ self-reliance through financial aid and technological access. But the current set-up ensures that refugees can only become autonomous by accepting the restrictions imposed on them.

      This kind of temporary inclusion cannot be a substitution for rights and legal protection, nor can claims to foster autonomy be separated from the struggle to end refugees’ containment on islands such as Lesbos.

      The drive for autonomy needs to dispense with the inequalities between individuals – between “saviours” and “saved”, those free to move and those stuck in limbo – that underpin humanitarian interventions. If we want to support refugees’ independent living, we cannot separate autonomy from freedom, which supports choice, dignity, mobility and a sense of control over their own lives.

      https://theconversation.com/how-cashless-programmes-to-support-refugees-independence-can-restri
      #autonomie #liberté #indépendance_financière #Grèce
      #Martina_Tazzioli

  • The Blockchain is a New Model of Governance
    http://www.coindesk.com/consensus-algorithm-and-a-new-model-of-governance

    As the Greece debt crisis unfolds and capital controls are forced down the throats of their people, bitcoin has moved back into the mainstream spotlight. With long lines in front of ATM machines reminiscent of the Cyprus bail-in, once again bitcoin appears to offer a safe haven.

    While many people focus on bitcoin’s price fluctuations and potential increase in adoption, currency is just the first application of this game-changing technology. The core of the blockchain provides an alternative governance model to the current oligarchic control shown in the harsh austerity forced against the will of the Greek (...)

    #cryptomonnaie #économie

  • Problems with payment terminal communication protocol “ZVT” in Germany, allowing
    • to read payment cards from the LAN
    • to read PIN codes remotely

    https://srlabs.de/pos-vulns (Security Research Lab)

    Fraudsters can, among other things, refund money, or print SIM card top-up vouchers – all at the cost of the victim merchant.

    Details of this will appear at the Chaos Communication Congress
    https://events.ccc.de/congress/2015/Fahrplan/events/7368.html

    Full agenda: https://events.ccc.de/congress/2015/Fahrplan/events.html

    #ATM
    #fraud
    #ISO_8583
    #ZVT #Poseidon

  • The Emirati plan for ruling Egypt
    http://www.middleeasteye.net/news/exclusive-emirati-plan-ruling-egypt-2084590756

    A top-secret strategy document prepared for Abu Dhabi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Zayed al-Nahyan reveals that the United Arab Emirates is losing faith in the ability of Egypt’s President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi to serve the Gulf state’s interests.

    The document, prepared by one of Bin Zayed’s team and dated 12 October, contains two key quotes which describe the frustration bin Zayed feels about Sisi, whose military coup the Crown Prince bankrolled, pouring in billions of dollars along with Saudi Arabia. It says: “This guy needs to know that I am not an ATM machine.” Further on, it also reveals the political price the Emiratis will exact if they continue to fund Egypt.

    Future strategy should be based on not just attempting to influence the government in Egypt but to control it. It is summarised thus: “Now I will give but under my conditions. If I give, I rule.”

  • Chip-and-PIN technology vulnerablility: ATM shimmer

    No special access is required to add the hack component to the ATM, because the component is added from outside.

    http://krebsonsecurity.com/2015/08/chip-card-atm-shimmer-found-in-mexico

    Fraud experts in Mexico have discovered an unusual ATM skimming device that can be inserted into the mouth of the cash machine’s card acceptance slot and used to read data directly off of chip-enabled credit or debit cards.

    The device pictured below is a type of skimmer known as a “shimmer,” so named because it acts a shim that sits between the chip on the card and the chip reader in the ATM — recording the data on the chip as it is read by the ATM.

    #fraud
    #ATM

  • How to Make a Country Vanish: A Journey Inside Eastern Ukraine - Defense One
    http://www.defenseone.com/threats/2015/07/how-make-country-vanish-journey-inside-eastern-ukraine/118255

    This division between what natives of the Donetsk region now call “Ukraine” and their own statelet of the DPR, carved out by separatists last May and recognized by no one else, appears to be solidifying. Separatist-held areas—which before the war were home to around 4.5 million people—are still hurting from the Ukrainian government’s move last November to halt payments for pensions and public services in the region. The gulf appeared to widen further last week, when Ukraine’s parliament took a step toward changing the constitution to devolve more powers from the central government to the country’s eastern regions, as part of a ceasefire agreement signed in February in Minsk. But in eastern Ukraine itself, the move to decentralize power seemed almost irrelevant.
    […]
    Across the Donetsk People’s Republic, traces of Ukraine were successfully being extinguished. Most Ukrainian businesses along the capital city’s birch-lined boulevards were fading into oblivion—shops shuttered, ATM screens and cell-phone top-up booths covered in a thick film of dust, untouched for months. Many foreign firms had also pulled out of the region due to security concerns. On the city’s yellow mailboxes, the Ukrainian word for “post”—poshta—had been changed to Russian—pochta—in crudely drawn marker, a divisive difference of one letter. Ukrainian license plates were gradually being replaced with ones belonging to the DPR. The Russian ruble, with its tributes to Czar Peter the Great and Moscow’s Bolshoi Theatre, was omnipresent, fast replacing the Ukrainian hryvnia and its depiction of Kiev’s Saint Sophia Cathedral. In a sprawling, covered outdoor market, rubles and hryvnia were quickly interchanged, as traders made fast mental calculations. “I actually prefer the ruble,” said Natalia, a jovial 47-year-old who was selling shoelaces and hair accessories. “Hopefully we’ll soon move completely to the ruble, as we’re not going back to being part of Ukraine.
    […]
    Behind the city’s grand and gray theater sat the Donetsk arm of the Lviv Handmade Chocolate Café, a quiet nest of resistance. It’s part of a chain of stores across the country that originated in the western city of Lviv; by company rules, the staff must wait on customers in the Ukrainian language, which came as something of a shock in a city where gun-wielding rebels bent on fighting Kiev roamed the streets. “Many people in the town are surprised we’re still functioning, but we’re happy to work here,” a senior member of the management told me, speaking on condition of anonymity. Supplies came from the chocolate factory in Lviv, and were sometimes delayed for weeks, she said. Display shelves by the entrance, usually filled with an array of freshly made truffles, were conspicuously empty. But high heels and teddy bears cast in milk chocolate were boxed up and ready for sale.

    Something else was awry. The café’s Kiev branches have a product that was missing in Donetsk: chocolate figurines of Vladimir Putin, clad in military fatigues with his arm wrapped behind his back. In his hidden palm, he holds an edible grenade.

  • "the result is Africa becoming a dumping ground for all of that equipment (as the vendors scramble to off-load these toxic assets) — either as cheap equipment for the market or as “technical aid”. [...] I’ve seen this before — stores filled with ’donated’ networking equipment that the recipient was unable to use because the technology was old and worthless or never even existed in most African countries (think hubs and routers with ATM interfaces in Northern Cameroon or Nigeria)."

    http://www.circleid.com/posts/20150713_ipv4_exhaustion_5_implications_for_africa_running_out_last

    #Africa #Internet #IPv6

  • Some Greeks use bitcoin to escape capital controls

    Capital controls now make it impossible for the Greek to wire money outside of the country (1). As they are afraid of returning back to the drachma they show interest in the bitcoin to transfer money.

    http://www.reuters.com/article/2015/07/03/us-eurozone-greece-bitcoin-idUSKCN0PD1B420150703

    New customers depositing at least 50 euros with BTCGreece, the only Greece-based bitcoin exchange, open only to Greeks, rose by 400 percent between May and June, according to its founder Thanos Marinos, who put the number at “a few thousand”. The average deposit quadrupled to around 700 euros.

    [...]

    On June 20, Greece got its first bitcoin “ATM”, in a family-run bookstore in Acharnes on the outskirts of Athens.

    [...]

    “A lot of people are keeping all the bitcoins they buy on our platform, until they understand what to do with them,” Marinos said. “In their eyes, now they have bitcoins, they’re safe.”

    Quite a volatile reasoning.

    –—
    (1) See also:

    People in Greece can’t buy things on #iTunes because of the country’s capital controls

    http://uk.businessinsider.com/greece-itunes-purchases-blocked-by-capital-controls-2015-7?r=US

    That’s because Apple is a foreign company, and Greeks are prevented from sending money abroad.

    This also causes issues with #iCloud.

    #bitcoin

  • #Tyupkin : Hackers installed ATM Malware

    Un malware qui installe un menu dans des distributeurs de billets (en Europe de l’Est) permet aux vilains voleurs d’obtenir de l’argent sur commande.

    Le malware dans ces distributeurs (qui tournent un Windows 32-bit), ne s’activait qu’à certains moments de la nuit afin de minimiser les chances d’être détecté. Le méchant doit alors entrer un certain code, suivi d’une clé pour éviter que le programme ne soit activé accidentellement.

    Grâce à des caméras de surveillance on a pu voir que les malfrats arrivaient à introduire le malware via un CD bootable dans la machine.

    Earlier this year, at the request of a financial institution, Kaspersky Lab’s Global Research and Analysis Team performed a forensics investigation into a cyber-criminal attack targeting multiple ATMs in Eastern Europe.

    During the course of this investigation, we discovered a piece of malware that allowed attackers to empty the ATM cash cassettes via direct manipulation.

    At the time of the investigation, the malware was active on more than 50 ATMs at banking institutions in Eastern Europe. Based on submissions to VirusTotal, we believe that the malware has spread to several other countries, including the U.S., India and China.

    mais aussi 1 en France

    Plus de détails techniques et une vidéo se trouvent dans le lien

    https://securelist.com/blog/research/66988/tyupkin-manipulating-atm-machines-with-malware

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QZvdPM_h2o8

    #hacking
    #malware
    #ATM
    #Kaspersky

  • Un DAB diarrhéique…

    Broken ATM at Maine bank spits out $37,000 | Fox News
    http://www.foxnews.com/us/2014/04/04/broken-atm-at-maine-bank-spits-out-37000

    Police in Maine are investigating after a malfunctioning ATM at a bank spit out $37,000 in cash to man who requested $140.

    South Portland police tell WGME-TV that they responded to the TD Bank branch at about 5:30 a.m. Thursday after getting a call from a woman who said a man was spending an unusual amount of time at the ATM she was waiting to use.

    Responding officers found the man stuffing cash into a shopping bag.

    The money was returned to the bank, and bank officials said they don’t want to press charges. But police continue to investigate. The identity of the man wasn’t released because he hasn’t been charged.

    A bank official described the problem as a “code error” and said no customer accounts were affected.

  • Warning signs: why street artist ATM is painting London’s endangered birds | Art and design | The Guardian
    http://www.theguardian.com/artanddesign/2014/mar/22/warning-signs-street-artist-atm-birds

    Raffa

    Warning signs: why street artist ATM is painting London’s endangered birds | Art and design | The Guardian - http://www.theguardian.com/artandd...

    5 minutes ago

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  • [DCSS] Advice for a 15-runer
    http://www.reddit.com/r/roguelikes/comments/1i1oc0/dcss_advice_for_a_15runer

    I don’t know how to dump from akrasiac, but I’ve got 3 runes and want to try for a 15 runer. MiFi worshipping TSO, only have * atm but already used his blessing on a demon blade. I haven’t done elven yet, but I’m not really sure what order to tackle the extended branches in, or if I should be trying to also train spellcasting and support spells for more firepower. submitted by raukolith [link] (...)

  • Justice et religion :

    Religious politics in Israel: Who’s a Jew? | The Economist
    An old religious argument once again rears its angry head
    May 18th 2013
    http://www.economist.com/news/middle-east-and-africa/21578098-old-religious-argument-once-again-rears-its-angry-head-whos-jew

    WHEN is a Jew not a Jew? When he’s a Karaite. Or so says Israel’s chief rabbinate, which, after 65 years of relative harmony with an ancient Jewish sect, is reopening an old and bitter schism. In recent months, rabbis working for Israel’s ministry of religion have deemed Karaite marriages invalid, fined their butchers for claiming to be kosher, and demanded that Karaites marrying Orthodox Jewish women should convert, sometimes having to undergo tavila, or baptism. “We are already Jews,” protests Moshe Firrouz, a computer engineer who heads the Karaites’ Council of Sages. “The rabbinate is denying us our religious freedom.”
    (...)
    The chief rabbinate, Israel’s state religious authority, reluctantly began legitimising their marriages again after a recent order by Israel’s Supreme Court , but it continues to argue that since Karaite rites are not Jewish, Karaites have lesser Jewish rights, too. “Israel is a Jewish state and Jews have superior rights,” says the chief rabbinate’s spokesman. “But the Karaites are not Jewish.”

    ““““““““““““““““““““““““““““““““““

    Women of the Wall member is targeted in ’Torah tag’ attack
    By Michael Omer-Man|Published May 20, 2013
    http://972mag.com/?post_type=nstt_feeditem&p=71809&preview=true

    A board member of the Women of the Wall group woke to find hateful graffiti, reminiscent of ‘price tag’ attacks, on her Jerusalem home Monday morning.

    The graffiti, which says “Torah Tag” and “Women of the Wall are wicked,” was spray painted on the apartment building where long-time board member of Women of the Wall Peggy Cider lives.

    Earlier this month, thousands of ultra-Orthodox Jews came out to protest against Women of the Wall at the Western Wall, following a favorable court ruling that affirmed their right to pray as they wish at the Western Wall.

    “““““““““““““““““““““““““““““““““““““““
    Les ultra-orthodoxes juifs disent “non” au service militaire
    17/05/2013
    http://www.france24.com/fr/20130517-ultra-orthodoxes-juifs-haredim-jerusalem-disent-non-service-milit

    "Laissez-nous éduquer nos enfants comme nous le faisons depuis des générations, a insisté le rabbin Moshe Shternboch dans les colonnes du « Jerusalem Post ». Vous pouvez voter des budgets et vos décrets mais nous continuerons, sans en tenir compte ."