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Az FSZB szerint Navalnij hamisította a mérgezését leleplező telefonbeszélgetést
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Ρωσία: Η FSB επιμένει ότι δεν δηλητηρίασε τον Ναβάλνι -Ψεύτικο το βίντεο, προβοκάτσια η έρευνα | ΚΟΣΜΟΣ
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Hraparak am: Russia security service chief arriving in Armenia at PM Pashinyan s request
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December 18, 2020
U.S. government cybersecurity agencies warned this week that the attackers behind the widespread hacking spree stemming from the compromise at network software firm SolarWinds used weaknesses in other, non-SolarWinds products to attack high-value targets. According to sources, among those was a flaw in software virtualization platform
VMware, which the
U.S. National Security Agency (NSA) warned on Dec. 7 was being used by Russian hackers to impersonate authorized users on victim networks.
On Dec. 7, 2020, the NSA said “Russian state-sponsored malicious cyber actors are exploiting a vulnerability in
VMware Access and
VMware Identity Manager products, allowing the actors access to protected data and abusing federated authentication.”
As he does, Russian President Vladimir Putin turned to a Soviet-era pop culture reference to get his message across at one point in his 4 1/2-hour annual press conference on December 17, when responding to the only reporter from a Western country that is not Iceland who got to ask a question.
“Let’s get along,” he said, quoting a remark from the cartoon cat named Leopold that is probably known to many millions of people from the former Soviet Union and almost nobody else.
The tomcat quote, which can also be translated as “Let’s be friends or “Let’s live in peace,” came at the end of an answer that echoed past diatribes in which Putin has put the lion’s share of the blame for badly frayed relations on Washington and the West and presented Russia as a constructive partner that is ready to improve ties once the other side comes to its senses.