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If you have a website, then it is likely that you are ever-vigilant to protect it from hackers and cyber threats. After all, your website is an asset, and if it gets hacked, you will not only lose the data stored on it but also tarnish your company's reputation. Fortunately, there are steps you can take to keep your website safe and secure. In this blog post, we will explore some of the best tips for securing your website from hackers. From password management strategies to security best practices for software development teams, we'll discuss everything you need to know to ensure the safety of your website.
Ethical
There are a number of ethical considerations to take into account when securing your website from hackers. One of the most important is to ensure that you do not inadvertently allow hackers access to your site. This means taking care to use strong passwords and keeping them confidential, as well as ensuring that your server is properly configured and secured.
Another ethical consideration is to avoid inadvertently harming other websites or systems in the course of securing your own. For example, if you were to implement a security measure that blocks all traffic from a certain IP address, you could unintentionally block legitimate traffic as well as malicious traffic. Therefore, it is important to consider the potential impacts of your security measures before implementing them.
Finally, you should also be aware of the legal implications of website security. In some jurisdictions, certain types of security measures may be considered illegal. For example, in some countries it may be illegal to use encryption on your website. As such, it is important to consult with a lawyer before implementing any website security measures.
Hacking
Hackers are always looking for new ways to exploit vulnerabilities in websites. They can deface your site, steal sensitive information, or even take over your entire server. It’s important to take steps to secure your website from these threats.
Here are some tips for securing your website from hackers:
1. Keep your software up to date
One of the most important things you can do to secure your website is to keep your software up to date. This includes your operating system, web server software, database software, and any other software you use on your server. Outdated software is often full of security holes that hackers can exploit.
2. Use strong passwords
Another important step in securing your website is to use strong passwords. Hackers often use automated tools to guess common passwords, so it’s important to choose passwords that are hard to guess. A good password should be at least 8 characters long and include a mix of uppercase and lowercase letters, numbers, and symbols.
3. Limit access to your admin area
If possible, you should limit access to your website’s admin area to only trusted users. This will help prevent hackers from gaining access to sensitive information or making changes to your site without permission. You can do this by setting up a password protection system or using an IP address whitelist.
4. Use a web application firewall
A web application firewall (WAF)
Cyber security
As the world becomes increasingly digitized, cyber security is more important than ever. Here are some tips to help you secure your website from hackers:
1. Use a strong password and never reuse passwords.
After, close to two years, it should surprise no one, many are, at the least, tired of this horrendous pandemic, or even, far - more, fatigued, and sick - and- tired of it, and the impact on our lives! However, this should not, and cannot justify, the utter - disregard of some, in terms of respecting the greater good, and abiding by basic, common sense, public health, protective measures! How did this become another, political issue, with so many, apparently putting their personal/ political interests and agenda, first? How many more must get infected, hospitalized, put others, at - risk, and/ or die? Many seniors have lost their battle, as have the immune - compromised, and we still do not know all the potential longer - term ramifications and impacts! Why does this nation, despite its efforts and spending, have, among, the lowest vaccination rates, in the world, among first - tier, developed nations? Everyone is tired of this, and would like, a return to normal, but, the efforts of a minority, harms our overall efforts, and the potential to optimize our efforts! With that in mind,this article will attempt to briefly examine and review this, and why, we must do better.
1) Conspiracy theories: For some reasons, some prefer to believe unfounded, opinions, and accept them, instead of facts. It began with denials, transformed to accusations, and created harmful resistance. Is there anyone, who has not witnessed or experienced the loss of someone close? While, everyone is entitled to an opinion of their own, they are not, to their own set of facts. It is one thing if your actions only harmed you, but quite - another, when it puts others,at - risk!
2) Politics: Why has this become political, like so many, apparently, common sense, issues, have? There is a huge difference between a viable solution,and well - considered, plan, as opposed to blaming and complaining, denials, and stubbornness!
3) Data and science matter: Mike Bloomberg likes to say, "In God We Trust. All others, bring data,." History shows, it takes a science - based, plan, endorsed and supported by public health, medical, and scientific personnel and experts, to create a meaningful, fact - based, efforts.
4) Mandate resistance: Although we have seen public health mandates, in the past, it seems we are experiencing the most polarized nation, in recent memory! Just because one doesn't agree, does not mean, he knows more than the experts!
The Metaverse. Some are calling it the following advancement of the Internet, others say it's now existed for a really long time. Somehow, it's the focal point of the absolute most powerful media organizations on the planet, and you ought to investigate it, as well.
I've generally been intrigued with the Metaverse, some time before I even realized there was a name attached to the thought. Going as far as possible back to when I was a youngster. Like most other young men, I was longing for being a hero, a knight, a swashbuckler, and on the most unconventional days, a few combination of those and a lot more activity y originals moved into one as I adventured through different universes worked in the aggregate dream of my companions and I.
As time went on, I consigned those domain stepping thoughts to the part at the rear of my psyche named "whimsical garbage," right close to light-sabers and world harmony feeling that videogames and books would be the nearest of intermediary for investigating different universes that I'd have in the course of my life.
That course of reasoning was changed in a moment one Saturday evening on a visit to a companion's home. I had popped in unannounced to observe a large number of my companions lumped into a group, quavering with brazen stunningness. At the point when they had sufficient sense about them all things considered to see the fresh introduction, I was guided to the focal point of the group, and tied into a massive headset, the Oculus Rift, playing a game called Robo Recall - a straightforward undertaking where you take shots at deviant robots rampaging through a cutting edge city.
Completely wrapped, with a degree of inundation I had never drawn closer, even with the most exciting of media I'd at any point consumed, I was merrily tearing through these crowds of robots.
I wasn't pointing a crosshair at these robots and clicking like had generally been the situation previously. All things considered, I was peering down the sights of the strange, modern weapons by moving my hand to eye level, squeezing my genuine fingers together to get a slug, and throwing my wrist forward to toss things.
It was only a brief time before the considerations of the cumbersome headgear and outsider regulators were totally gone, and I was totally inside this game. Unfortunately, the game came not without risk I whipped to one side to shoot one of those rampaging robots and felt a sharp break toward the rear of my hand, and pulling the headset off, I understood I had clubbed one of my young men with the Rift's regulator.
As he got himself from the floor I put myself into opportunity for being a threat to essentially everyone, and as I sat out of the way looking as others took their own turns it was completely cheerful to shoot robots I. This thing I was seeing - - I realized it was monumentous. Not on the grounds that this innovation all alone was progressive and sort of astonishing to see, but since it was a small gradual step between this present reality and a fantastical and genuinely limitless one, interesting to some inactive expectation profound inside me. Something that appeared to be so inconceivably far away, was arising into the real world, and having the unbelievable graciousness not exclusively to occur during my lifetime, yet before my actual eyes.
"A disclaimer"
Before we dig into the immense and complex issue of attempting to divine the fate of innovation - an errand wherein a lot more qualified before me have bombed hopelessly - or become lifted up in their unrivaled facticity, I might want to incorporate something much the same as a disclaimer.
Takes on the web, cell phones, TV, and essentially every other advancement of innovation at the hour of their origination and reception tend to slant outwards to those two limits. We feature and utilize the absolute most unfortunate deniers utilizing the clearness of knowing the past to make those speakers of olden times into a joke, or feature individuals who were forward thinking while at the same time overlooking the average sentiments that make up the contemporary idea.
While I sing the commendations of the astounding innovative headways, I likewise desire to admonish that there are horrible perils astir. The more we become derailed in the presence wonderland, the more the bosses of that space will can impact our lives, thoughts, and discernment… an open door we realize they will seize whenever given.
I accept that the Metaverse is a certainty, save for a fiasco of framework or a fundamental change in human way of behaving. Similar to the request for our general public, what used to be a capricious thought will be inhaled into reality pushing ahead, regardless of whether it appears as harmful and abominably defiled.
From My perspective, humankind moves toward the Metaverse, stepping a restricted and frightening way. Holding up toward the end, a definitive award for going where we have never tried, nor been able to go previously, an Eden where mankind's innovative marking will permit us to genuinely rise above a significant number of the limits of our essential actual reality and to a great extent take out the strategic obstacles of room and distance from a horde of exercises.
The peril lies on one or the other side of that way, pulling at us with a voracious gravity towards dark entanglements of corporate control. Where a considerable lot of mankind's base opportunities are a deception. The noblemen of those ruined realms having full oversight over what might exist inside this new reality that we take on.
As we investigate the possibility of the Metaverse here today, I beg you to consider that the innovation that will before long be available to us doesn't have the intrinsic nature of being a preeminent decent, nor an extreme, fixing evil. Something will be assembled and directed by the activities and goals of many individuals, and has the capacity to wind up in both of these last objections, thus numerous in the middle.
Where did "Metaverse" come from?
The prefix "Meta-" implies past, and "- stanza" alludes to the Universe. Consolidate them to get the fairly fitting term "Metaverse," signifying "past the Universe." All things considered, Metaverse feels a suitably lavish word for the thoughts it addresses.
This totally new popular expression we're tossing around isn't very new. It started in the 1992 Sci-fi novel, Snow Crash. I feel it is important that this is the very spot that is remembered to have promoted the expression "symbol" while alluding to a computerized portrayal of somebody, so with that award you can perceive Snow Crash affected the tech a long time past when it was composed.
North Korea's leader Kim Jong-un has said the faltering economy will be the national priority this year as the country faces a "great life-and-death struggle".
He was speaking at the end of a key ruling party meeting, which coincides with him being in power for 10 years
A self-imposed coronavirus blockade has left North Korea struggling with food shortages.
There was no direct mention of the US or South Korea in his speech.
Mr Kim said increasing development and improving people's living standards was the main task.
He acknowledged the "harsh situation" in 2021 and and set "an important task for making radical progress in solving the food, clothing and housing problem for the people", the official Korean Central News Agency (KCNA) reported.
He said battling the pandemic was one of the main goals for the coming year: "Emergency epidemic prevention work should be made a top priority in the state work," he is quoted as saying by KCNA.
But he also said Pyongyang would continue to strengthen its defence capabilities because of an increasingly unstable military environment on the Korean peninsula.
He was speaking on Friday at the end of the 4th Plenary Meeting of the 8th Central Committee of the Workers' Party of Korea (WPK), which began on Monday.
There were reports earlier this year that people in the country were going hungry, giving rise to concerns as winter approached about a full-blown food crisis.
The border has been closed since January 2020 to prevent the spread of Covid-19 from China.
Following a year in which leader Kim Jong-un repeatedly stressed North Korea's dire economic condition and food shortages, these challenges were once again in the spotlight at the ruling Workers' Party's year-end plenum.
Kim's warning of a "great life-or-death struggle" in 2022 echoes last April's rhetoric urging officials to prepare for another "Arduous March", referencing North Korea's greatest economic crisis and famine in the 1990s.
While such comparisons overexaggerate the situation, North Korea's economic woes have indeed been exacerbated by Covid-19-related border closures, international sanctions and natural disasters.
These have all contributed to what Kim described in June as a "tense" food situation, and international agencies also warn of growing food insecurity and starvation.
Kim's emphasis on implementation of the national economic plan, rural development and advancing "scientific farming" now serves to remind citizens that their leader is prioritising their needs, while setting expectations for another year of economic struggles.
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Mr Kim's new year speeches have previously included messages to South Korea and the US, but there were no explicit mentions this time.
"If we consider this report on the plenum as a replacement of Kim Jong-un's annual New Year's speech, it can be said that it's by far the shortest mention of inter-Korean relations and foreign policy ever," Cheong Seong-chang, a senior researcher at Sejong Institute, told NK News.
At the end of last year, North and South Korea, the US, and China agreed in principle to declare a formal end to the Korean War which ended in an armistice.
But talks have yet to begin because of North Korea's demands, South Korea has said.
"Playing video games can make you a better driver." That statement probably brings to mind games like Gran Turismo or Forza Motorsports. Sure, these games can teach players the mechanics of driving, especially when using steering wheels and pedal controls, but are they the best at improving driving skills?
Ironically, studies have shown that first-person shooters, like Call of Duty, actually provide more benefits for drivers than driving games do.
Gaming has come a long way from the single-joystick, single-button days of the Atari 2600. Now players have to contend with gamepads featuring dual joysticks and 12 or more buttons.
Growing up through the evolution of controllers, some players likely find using modern devices effortless because they have been using these complicated input mechanisms all their lives. Their eye-to-hand coordination is already conditioned. But is that directly related to playing games or just an environmental factor?
According to a 2014 study by the University of Toronto, playing action-intense video games like Call of Duty or Assassin's Creed did not reliably enhance sensorimotor control (eye-to-hand coordination). However, it did improve sensorimotor learning, meaning gamers were better than non-gamers at performing tasks with a "consistent and predictable structure."
The researchers tested this by having the two groups keep a cursor within a white square as it moved around a computer screen. At first, both groups performed equally. As the participants continued to practice, the gamers showed far better and quicker improvement in keeping the cursor in the square than non-gamers.
It might not seem like keeping a cursor within a square on a computer screen translates well into making one a better driver, but it actually does. It's not about the action that is taking place on the screen, but what is going on in the brain. The cognitive functions and visual acuity are what matters. Realizing the square has changed directions and then altering the course of the cursor before it leaves its confines relates directly to situations where a driver must make a split-second decision to avoid an accident.
The 2014 Toronto study is not the only evidence to show that Call of Duty and similar games can improve skills used in driving. Professor of Brain and Cognitive Sciences Daphne Bavelier at the University of Rochester has spent most of her time studying the cognitive effects of gaming and has some interesting insights into how playing action video games affect players.
In a 2012 TEDx Talk (watch below), Dr. Bavelier debunked a long-held myth that playing video games damage a player's eyesight. It might be intuitive to think that excessive time in front of the screen would harm your vision, but Bavelier says this is simply not true. She and her team have measured eyesight in the lab of gamers and non-gamers, and the former consistently had better vision than the latter -- even those who played up to 15 hours per week tested better than 20/20 vision.
Not only do game players have better visual acuity, but they also have a sharper perception of different shades of gray. Dr. Bavelier analogizes this with an example of driving in a fog.
"The other way that gamers are better is actually being able to resolve different levels of gray," Bavelier said. "Imagine you're driving in the fog. That makes the difference between seeing the car in front of you and avoiding the accident or getting into an accident."
Another myth that runs contrary to her findings is that games lead to attention problems and greater distractibility. Scientists have studied attention for decades, and there are plenty of standard tests to measure it in a quantifiable manner.
Bavelier found that people who play Call of Duty have far better attention than non-players. A simple test they used was to show test subjects colored words and ask them to state the ink color of each word as they appear. Some words introduced a cognitive conflict. For example, the word blue appearing in red ink. Results showed that the gamers were far quicker at resolving those conflicts than those that did not play.
Another attention test involves tracking multiple moving targets. The average person can keep tabs on about three or four objects at once. Action video game players have a span of around six to seven. These results are relatively predictable considering what it takes to play action games like Call of Duty, especially in hectic multiplayer matches. It's a good thing too, since we need to keep that many browser tabs open just to have a shot at scoring a new graphics card these days.
Attention is a critical attribute when driving. Just think of all the things you have to pay attention to at the same time when driving -- the cars in front, behind, and beside you; the children playing near the street up ahead; the color of the traffic signal; your speed; the speed of cross traffic when approaching a green light. There are many things you have to maintain focus on when driving. And lab tests show action gamers are very good at this.
Bavelier's research further confirms the practical testing results with brain imaging. There are three areas of the brain that regulate attention. The parietal lobe controls the orientation of attention. The frontal lobe sustains attention. Lastly, the anterior cingulate controls how we allocate concentration and resolve conflict.
"Now, when we do brain imaging, we find that all three of these networks are actually much more efficient in people that play action games," Bavelier said.
However, we again fall back to the argument of whether these results were directly related to playing games or just common environmental factors. Fortunately, Bavelier considered causality, too, which is easy to test in the lab.
Bavelier and her team performed a controlled training study to establish causality. What they did was have participants take cognitive tests at the start. Then subjects would play 10 hours of action games over two weeks in 40-minute sessions. Subjects then took the same cognitive tests, and the results found that not only did they perform better, but the improvements were still present five months after the training.
The training tests show two things. First, they prove the causality between visual and cognitive improvements when playing video games like Call of Duty. The positive effects are not caused by environmental conditions common to gamers. Second, it shows that training your brain on these games has lasting effects.
Indeed, another study out of Shanghai in 2016 showed that playing high-action titles physically rewires the brain, so the benefits are at least semi-permanent. The researchers wanted to know if playing video games improved practical driving skills. They also wanted to find out whether the type of game mattered.
They tested participants using a driving simulator. One group played action games for 5 to 10 hours, and the other played slower-paced games. The study found that the action players performed markedly better in subsequent simulator testing than the non-action players.
"Our research shows that playing easily accessible action video games for as little as 5 hours can be a cost-effective tool to help people improve essential visuomotor-control skills used for driving," said researcher and co-author of the paper Li Li of New York University Shanghai.
Researchers used Mario Kart and Rollercoaster Tycoon for action and non-action training, respectively. The driving simulator was set up to have participants drive a car down a lane while compensating for crosswinds that affected the car's behavior.