Jellyfish blooms sign of troubles ahead for fishermen
Business
March 7, 2021
HYDERABAD: Majeed Motani, a veteran boat captain from Ibrahim Hydri, Karachi, believes that fishermen were too slow in understanding the damage their practices brought on the marine environment.
“It took more time to make fishermen realise that they have destroyed potential fishing grounds around them, and now they are compelled to catch jellyfish blooms for survival,” he said.
Hardly a few years back, boat crews used to get a headache whenever their nets were filled by jellyfish. They never tried to collect it for commercial purposes, because there was no market to sell it. But now they love to catch jellyfish to sell in the market, Majeed said.
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Mar 7, 2021 10:52 EST with 0 comments
The week brought everything from Ignite news aplenty – as expected – to a rather serious set of Exchange on-prem vulnerabilities, and the usual Windows Insider builds. You can find info about that, as well as much more below, in your Microsoft digest for the week of February 28 – March 6.
An unfortunate Exchange
CVE-2021-26855, CVE-2021-26857, CVE-2021-26858, and CVE-2021-27065, otherwise known as the set of vulnerabilities in Exchange on-premises servers that were used by state-sponsored Chinese hacking group HAFNIUM in its attacks this week (and the days prior).
While news of the exploits started circulating at the beginning of the year, the vulnerability chaining did not happen until earlier this week. Microsoft has outlined a number of Indicators of Compromise (or IOCs), along with pushing out out-of-band patches for all affected Exchange on-prem servers - versions 2013 through to 2019. The company has urged admins to
The daily readings are taken from the lectionary which divides much of the Bible into three years worth of readings. If you complete the daily readings each day for three years, you will read 15 percent of the Old Testament and 71 percent of the New Testament.