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La panne géante d’Internet d’octobre 2025 a servi de crash test à des cybercriminels 

27 novembre 2025 à 14:56

Dans un rapport publié le 26 novembre 2025, les chercheurs en étude de menace de Fortinet reviennent sur une opération cybercriminelle passée largement inaperçue. C'était tout le but : elle a eu lieu pendant la panne mondiale d'Internet d'octobre 2025.

Amazon Faces FAA Probe After Delivery Drone Snaps Internet Cable In Texas

Par :BeauHD
27 novembre 2025 à 02:02
Amazon's drone-delivery program is under federal scrutiny after an MK30 aircraft clipped an internet cable in Texas. CNBC reports: The incident occurred on Nov. 18 around 12:45 p.m. Central in Waco, Texas. After dropping off a package, one of Amazon's MK30 drones was ascending out of a customer's yard when one of its six propellers got tangled in a nearby internet cable, according to a video of the incident viewed and verified by CNBC. The video shows the Amazon drone shearing the wire line. The drone's motor then appeared to shut off and the aircraft landed itself, with its propellers windmilling slightly on the way down, the video shows. The drone appeared to remain in tact beyond some damage to one of its propellers. The Federal Aviation Administration is investigating the incident, a spokesperson confirmed. The National Transportation Safety Board said the agency is aware of the incident but has not opened a probe into the matter. Amazon confirmed the incident to CNBC, saying that after clipping the internet cable, the drone performed a "safe contingent landing," referring to the process that allows its drones to land safely in unexpected conditions. "There were no injuries or widespread internet service outages. We've paid for the cable line's repair for the customer and have apologized for the inconvenience this caused them," an Amazon spokesperson told CNBC, noting that the drone had completed its package delivery.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

The Underwater Cables That Carry the Internet Are in Trouble

Par :msmash
26 novembre 2025 à 14:48
The roughly 500 fiber-optic cables lying on the ocean floor carry more than 95% of all internet data -- not satellites, as many might assume -- and they face growing threats from natural disasters, terrorists and nation-states capable of disrupting global communications by dragging anchors or deploying submarines against the infrastructure. The cables are protected by layers of copper, steel, and plastics, but they remain vulnerable at multiple points: earthquakes can disturb them on the seafloor, and the connections where cables meet land-based infrastructure present targets for bad actors. National actors including Russia, China and the US possess the capability to attack these cables. A bipartisan Senate bill co-sponsored by Democrat Jeanne Shaheen and Republican John Barrasso is under consideration. The legislation would require a report to Congress within six months on Chinese and Russian sabotage efforts, mandate sanctions against foreign parties responsible for attacks, and direct the US to provide more resources for cable protection and repair.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Revue de presse de l’April pour la semaine 47 de l’année 2025

Par :echarp
25 novembre 2025 à 09:33

Cette revue de presse sur Internet fait partie du travail de veille mené par l’April dans le cadre de son action de défense et de promotion du logiciel libre. Les positions exposées dans les articles sont celles de leurs auteurs et ne rejoignent pas forcément celles de l’April.

[clubic.com] Victoire pour les logiciels libres de caisse et commerçants français, qui disent 'merci' aux députés

✍ Alexandre Boero, le vendredi 21 novembre 2025.

L’Assemblée nationale redonne de l’air aux éditeurs de logiciels de caisse. Un amendement adopté jeudi rétablit l’auto-attestation, alternative bienvenue à une certification qui mettait en péril les petites structures.

Tout reste à refaire au Sénat, car l’Assemblée nationale a finalement rejeté le projet de loi de finances.

[Next] Eugen Rochko cède les rênes de Mastodon, qui consolide sa gouvernance

✍ Alexandre Laurent, le jeudi 20 novembre 2025.

Dix ans après le lancement du projet, Eugen Rochko cède les rênes à un trio déjà très impliqué dans le développement de Mastodon et du fédivers. La petite équipe qui pilote le projet confirme avoir engagé les travaux nécessaires à la création d’une association à but non lucratif de droit belge. Celle-ci doit faire perdurer la volonté historique de son fondateur : créer une alternative aux réseaux sociaux détenus par des milliardaires.

[Goodtech] L'April lance une campagne de soutien: 30 000 € nécessaires pour poursuivre ses actions

Le jeudi 20 novembre 2025.

L’association April, pilier français du logiciel libre, appelle à récolter 30 000 € pour poursuivre ses actions en 2025. Une campagne originale, «Le Lama Déchaîné», retrace ses engagements.

[ZDNET] Sur la souveraineté numérique, Macron appelé à soutenir l'IA open source

✍ Christophe Auffray, le mardi 18 novembre 2025.

Pour renforcer la souveraineté, des éditeurs de l’IA plaident pour un soutien à l’IA open source, notamment via la commande publique.

Et aussi:

[Le Temps] L'école obligatoire genevoise est acquise à Linux, et cela intéresse le Ministère français de l'éducation nationale (€)

✍ Grégoire Barbey, le lundi 17 novembre 2025.

Le Département de l’instruction publique a développé ces vingt dernières années une approche centrée sur les logiciels libres pour l’enseignement. Le Service écoles-médias l’a présentée mercredi à un représentant du Ministère de l’éducation nationale

Commentaires : voir le flux Atom ouvrir dans le navigateur

How the Internet Rewired Work - and What That Tells Us About AI's Likely Impact

23 novembre 2025 à 12:34
"The internet did transform work — but not the way 1998 thought..." argues the Wall Street Journal. "The internet slipped inside almost every job and rewired how work got done." So while the number of single-task jobs like travel agent dropped, most jobs "are bundles of judgment, coordination and hands-on work," and instead the internet brought "the quiet transformation of nearly every job in the economy... Today, just 10% of workers make minimal use of the internet on the job — roles like butcher and carpet installer." [T]he bigger story has been additive. In 1998, few could conceive of social media — let alone 65,000 social-media managers — and 200,000 information-security analysts would have sounded absurd when data still lived on floppy disks... Marketing shifted from campaign bursts to always-on funnels and A/B testing. Clinics embedded e-prescribing and patient portals, reshaping front-office and clinical handoffs. The steps, owners and metrics shifted. Only then did the backbone scale: We went from server closets wedged next to the mop sink to data centers and cloud regions, from lone system administrators to fulfillment networks, cybersecurity and compliance. That is where many unexpected jobs appeared. Networked machines and web-enabled software quietly transformed back offices as much as our on-screen lives. Similarly, as e-commerce took off, internet-enabled logistics rewired planning roles — logisticians, transportation and distribution managers — and unlocked a surge in last-mile work. The build-out didn't just hire coders; it hired coordinators, pickers, packers and drivers. It spawned hundreds of thousands of warehouse and delivery jobs — the largest pockets of internet-driven job growth, and yet few had them on their 1998 bingo card... Today, the share of workers in professional and managerial occupations has more than doubled since the dawn of the digital era. So what does that tell us about AI? Our mental model often defaults to an industrial image — John Henry versus the steam drill — where jobs are one dominant task, and automation maps one-to-one: Automate the task, eliminate the job. The internet revealed a different reality: Modern roles are bundles. Technologies typically hit routine tasks first, then workflows, and only later reshape jobs, with second-order hiring around the backbone. That complexity is what made disruption slower and more subtle than anyone predicted. AI fits that pattern more than it breaks it... [LLMs] can draft briefs, summarize medical notes and answer queries. Those are tasks — important ones — but still parts of larger roles. They don't manage risk, hold accountability, reassure anxious clients or integrate messy context across teams. Expect a rebalanced division of labor: The technical layer gets faster and cheaper; the human layer shifts toward supervision, coordination, complex judgment, relationship work and exception handling. What to expect from AI, then, is messy, uneven reshuffling in stages. Some roles will contract sharply — and those contractions will affect real people. But many occupations will be rewired in quieter ways. Productivity gains will unlock new demand and create work that didn't exist, alongside a build-out around data, safety, compliance and infrastructure. AI is unprecedented; so was the internet. The real risk is timing: overestimating job losses, underestimating the long, quiet rewiring already under way, and overlooking the jobs created in the backbone. That was the internet's lesson. It's likely to be AI's as well.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Quantum Teleportation Between Photons From Two Distant Light Sources Achieved

Par :BeauHD
20 novembre 2025 à 07:00
Researchers in Germany achieved a major milestone for the future quantum internet by successfully teleporting quantum information between photons generated by two different, physically separated quantum dots -- something never accomplished before due to the difficulty of producing indistinguishable photons from remote sources. Phys.org reports: At the University of Stuttgart, the team succeeded in teleporting the polarization state of a photon originating from one quantum dot to another photon from a second quantum dot. One quantum dot generates a single photon, the other an entangled photon pair. Entangled means that the two particles constitute a single quantum entity, even when they are physically separated. One of the two particles travels to the second quantum dot and interferes with its light particle. The two overlap. Because of this superposition, the information of the single photon is transferred to the distant partner of the pair. Instrumental for the success of the experiment were quantum frequency converters, which compensate for residual frequency differences between the photons. These converters were developed by a team led by Prof. Christoph Becher, an expert in quantum optics at Saarland University. [...] In the Stuttgart experiment, the quantum dots were separated only by an optical fiber of about 10 m length. "But we are working on achieving considerably greater distances," says Strobel. In earlier work, the team had shown that the entanglement of the quantum dot photons remains intact even after a 36-kilometer transmission through the city center of Stuttgart. Another aim is to increase the current success rate of teleportation, which currently stands at just over 70%. Fluctuations in the quantum dot still lead to slight differences in the photons. The findings have been published in the journal Nature Communications.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Europe's Cookie Nightmare is Crumbling

Par :msmash
19 novembre 2025 à 19:25
The EU's cookie consent policies have been an annoying and unavoidable part of browsing the web in Europe since their introduction in 2018. But the cookie nightmare is about to crumble thanks to some big proposed changes announced by the European Commission today. From a report: Instead of having to click accept or reject on a cookie pop-up for every website you visit in Europe, the EU is preparing to enforce rules that will allow users to set their preferences for cookies at the browser level. "People can set their privacy preferences centrally -- for example via the browser -- and websites must respect them," says the EU. "This will drastically simplify users' online experience." This key change is part of a new Digital Package of proposals to simplify the EU's digital rules, and will initially see cookie prompts change to be a simplified yes or no single-click prompt ahead of the "technological solutions" eventually coming to browsers. Websites will be required to respect cookie choices for at least six months, and the EU also wants website owners to not use cookie banners for "harmless uses" like counting website visits, to lessen the amount of pop-ups.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Cloudflare Explains Its Worst Outage Since 2019

Par :msmash
19 novembre 2025 à 14:47
Cloudflare suffered its worst network outage in six years on Tuesday, beginning at 11:20 UTC. The disruption prevented the content delivery network from routing traffic for roughly three hours. The failure, writes Cloudflare in a blog post, originated from a database permissions change deployed at 11:05 UTC. The modification altered how a database query returned information about bot detection features. The query began returning duplicate entries. A configuration file used to identify automated traffic doubled in size and spread across the network's machines. Cloudflare's traffic routing software reads this file to distinguish bots from legitimate users. The software had a built-in limit of 200 bot detection features. The enlarged file contained more than 200 entries. The software crashed when it encountered the unexpected file size. Users attempting to access websites behind Cloudflare's network received error messages. The outage affected multiple services. Turnstile security checks failed to load. The Workers KV storage service returned elevated error rates. Users could not log into Cloudflare's dashboard. Access authentication failed for most customers. Engineers initially suspected a coordinated attack. The configuration file was automatically regenerated every five minutes. Database servers produced either correct or corrupted files during a gradual system update. Services repeatedly recovered and failed as different versions of the file circulated. Teams stopped generating new files at 14:24 UTC and manually restored a working version. Most traffic resumed by 14:30 UTC. All systems returned to normal at 17:06 UTC.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Unity dans Fortnite, Unreal chez Unity

Sur la scène de l’Unite 25 à Barcelone, Unity et Epic Games ont scellé une collaboration. Ses ressorts sont exposés dans un communiqué dont le titre annonce la couleur : Unity and Epic Games Together Advance the Open, Interoperable Future for Video Gaming... [Tout lire]

On sait enfin pourquoi le web a planté dans le monde entier, et ce n’était pas une attaque

19 novembre 2025 à 09:56

cloudflare

Après une panne mondiale de plusieurs heures ayant paralysé une partie importante du web, Cloudflare a dévoilé les causes de l'incident. Contrairement aux soupçons initiaux, il ne s'agissait pas d'une cyberattaque, mais d'une erreur technique assez banale. Mais cela a fini par devenir la pire panne de Cloudflare depuis 2019.

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