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South Africa’s government-run weather service knocked offline by cyberattack | The Record from Recorded Future News
South Africa’s government-run weather service knocked offline by cyberattack | The Record from Recorded Future News
A cyberattack has forced the government-run South African Weather Service (SAWS) offline, limiting access to a critical service used by the country’s airlines, farmers and allies. The website for SAWS has been down since Sunday evening, according to a statement posted to social media. SAWS has had to use Facebook, X and other sites to share daily information on thunderstorms, wildfires and other weather events.
·therecord.media·
South Africa’s government-run weather service knocked offline by cyberattack | The Record from Recorded Future News
OpenAI launches ChatGPT Gov for U.S. government agencies
OpenAI launches ChatGPT Gov for U.S. government agencies
OpenAI on Tuesday announced the launch of ChatGPT for government agencies in the U.S. ...It allows government agencies, as customers, to feed “non-public, sensitive information” into OpenAI’s models while operating within their own secure hosting environments, OpenAI CPO Kevin Weil told reporters during a briefing Monday.
·cnbc.com·
OpenAI launches ChatGPT Gov for U.S. government agencies
Chinese hackers breached US government office that assesses foreign investments for national security risks
Chinese hackers breached US government office that assesses foreign investments for national security risks
Chinese hackers breached the US government office that reviews foreign investments for national security risks, three US officials familiar with the matter told CNN. The theft, which has not previously been reported, underscores Beijing’s keen interest in spying on a US government office that has broad powers to block Chinese investment in the US as tensions between the world’s two superpowers remain high. The breach was part of a broader incursion by the hackers into the Treasury Department’s unclassified system. The office targeted by the hackers, the Committee on Foreign Investment in the US (CFIUS), in December gained greater authority to scrutinize real estate sales near US military bases. US lawmakers and national security officials have grown increasingly worried that the Chinese government or its proxies could use land acquisitions to spy on those bases.
·edition.cnn.com·
Chinese hackers breached US government office that assesses foreign investments for national security risks