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10 votes
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Did the United States almost support Nazi Germany in World War II? (No)
10 votes -
Stonemaier Games (creators of Wingspan) join US tariffs lawsuit
29 votes -
US lays out plans to hit Chinese ships with port fees
15 votes -
Temu and Shein are raising their US prices next week
19 votes -
Cancellations of Chinese freight ships begin as bookings plummet
8 votes -
MITRE support for the Common Vulnerabilities and Exposures (CVE) program will expire tomorrow
A letter to CVE board members posted to bluesky a few hours ago reveals that MITRE funding for the Common Vulnerabilities and Exposures (CVE) program is about to expire. Haven't found any good...
A letter to CVE board members posted to bluesky a few hours ago reveals that MITRE funding for the Common Vulnerabilities and Exposures (CVE) program is about to expire. Haven't found any good articles that cover this news story yet, but it's spreading like wildfire over on bluesky.
Of course this doesn't mean that the CVE program will immediately cease to exist, but at the moment MITRE funding is absolutely essential for its longterm survival.
In a nutshell CVEs are a way to centrally organize, rate, and track software vulnerabilities. Basically any publicly known vulnerability out there can be referred to via their CVE number. The system is an essential tool for organizations worldwide to keep track of and manage vulnerabilities and implement appropriate defensive measures. Its collapse would be devestating for the security of information systems worldwide.
How can one guy in a position of power destroy so much in such a short amount of time..? I hope the EU will get their shit together and fund independent alternatives for all of these systems being butchered at the moment...
Edit/Update 20250415 21:10 UTC:
It appears Journalist David DiMolfetta confirmed the legitimacy of the letter with a source a bit over an hour ago and published a corresponding article on nextgov 28 minutes ago.Edit/Update 20250415 21:25 UTC:
Brian Krebs also talked to MITRE to confirm this news. On infosec.exchange he writes:I reached out to MITRE, and they confirmed it is for real. Here is the contract, which is through the Department of Homeland Security, and has been renewed annually on the 16th or 17th of April.
MITRE's CVE database is likely going offline tomorrow. They have told me that for now, historical CVE records will be available at GitHub, https://github.com/CVEProjectEdit/Update 20250415 21:37 UTC:
Abovementioned post has been supplemented by Brian Krebs 5 Minutes ago with this comment:Hearing a bit more on this. Apparently it's up to the CVE board to decide what to do, but for now no new CVEs will be added after tomorrow. the CVE website will still be up.
Edit/Update 20250416 08:40 UTC:
First off here's one more article regarding the situation by Brian Krebs - the guy I cited above, as well as a YouTube video by John Hammond.In more positive news: first attempts to save the project seem to emerge. Tib3rius posted on Bluesky about half an hour ago, that a rogue group of CVE board members has Launched a CVE foundation to secure the project's future. It's by no means a final solution, but it's at least a first step to give some structure to the chaos that has emerged, and a means to manage funding from potential alternative sources that will hopefully step up to at least temporarily carry the project.
Edit/Update 20250416 15:20 UTC:
It appears the public uproar got to them. According to a nextgov article by David DiMolfetta the contract has been extended by 11 months on short notice just hours before it expired...Imo the events of the past 24 hours will leave their mark. It has become very clear that relying on the US government for such critical infrastructure is not a sustainable approach. I'm certain (or at least I hope) that other governments (i.e. EU) will draw appropriate consequences and build their own infrastructure to take over if needed. The US is really giving up their influence on the world at large at an impressive pace.
55 votes -
Waymo to operate on car-free Market Street in San Francisco
17 votes -
CISA extends funding to ensure 'no lapse in critical CVE services'
15 votes -
US abortions hold steady but fewer cross state lines for procedure, study finds
12 votes -
US Department of Veterans Affairs mental health therapists’ script: ‘I cannot guarantee complete confidentiality’
24 votes -
Apple airlifts 600 tons of iPhones from India 'to beat' Donald Trump tariffs, sources say
18 votes -
Explaining the Donald Trump tariff in the US
18 votes -
Second measles death reported in Texas
41 votes -
Second child dies in US measles outbreak as cases continue to rise
9 votes -
The new US tariffs - weird formulas, risks, and the coming trade war
34 votes -
When is it okay to give up?
When is is okay to give up on making a situation work? I legitimately ask, as I’ve pretty much given up on most “immediate” family in recent months. As an American federal civilian employee, I...
When is is okay to give up on making a situation work?
I legitimately ask, as I’ve pretty much given up on most “immediate” family in recent months. As an American federal civilian employee, I found the rhetoric of my immediate family crazy enough to warrant cutting them out of my life. I can’t get beyond their clear contempt for my livelihood. Despite conversations regarding how a certain admin’s policies are making my life worse, I have been told constantly not to complain because it could be worse. So I have “given up” and no longer interact with them. There have been further conversations prior to this, but I don’t think it’s necessarily important to the conversation.
I ask this legitimately, as I am feeling guilt over it, despite the fact that I no longer feel dread or anxiety about it. I haven’t visited immediate family in over 2 months now, despite living within walking distance.
At what point should one continue making attempts to repair to maintain relationships, even familial, and when is it okay to end them?
34 votes -
‘The terror is real’: an appalled US tech industry is scared to criticize Elon Musk
36 votes -
Romance author Ali Hazelwood cancels UK tours over doubt she could 'safely' return to US
23 votes -
President Donald Trump's tariff formula contains math error that mistakenly quadruples rate on every country, says American Enterprise Institute
43 votes -
Nintendo delays Switch 2 pre-orders in US due to tariffs and "evolving market conditions"
45 votes -
Denmark's Maersk buys Panama Canal railway – deal loosens US control of train link at a time when Donald Trump is seeking to ‘take back’ trade waterway
16 votes -
Bikes in the age of tariffs
12 votes -
How have US food prices changed? Our tracker can give you a sense.
13 votes -
Real Page Inc. sues California city officials over ban on rental price algorithms
20 votes -
Eastern District of Texas strikes down Food and Drug Administration’s final rule regulating laboratory developed tests
13 votes -
California lawmakers reject bills to ban trans athletes’ participation in girls sports
19 votes -
Miami-Dade County commissioners vote in favor of removing fluoride from water systems
12 votes -
Henry Kissinger's Moo Goo Gai Pan is real. Is it good?
6 votes -
Thanks to recent US law, Elon Musk and Taylor Swift can now hide details of their private jets
29 votes -
Hawaiʻi's needy wait as benefits system tech overhaul runs late, busts budget
7 votes -
How a Chinese battery factory sparked a political meltdown in a small Michigan town
13 votes -
What is the truth about risks and benefits of seed oils?
19 votes -
As NASA faces cuts, China reveals ambitious plans for planetary exploration
16 votes -
Border-straddling library raises $140K for renovations after US limits Canadian access
19 votes -
Race against the regime: The 1936 Olympics, and the Nazi rise to power
7 votes -
Delete the workforce
11 votes -
US government workers and military planners love Signal now
30 votes -
US President John F. Kennedy files expose family secrets: Their relatives were CIA assets
21 votes -
Denmark issues a new travel advisory for the US that warns transgender and non-binary people to contact the American embassy before departure
25 votes -
Ben & Jerry’s claims Unilever ousted its CEO for his progressive stance
37 votes -
US federal judge blocks Donald Trump administration from banning transgender people from military service
33 votes -
From Stonewall to now: US LGBTQ+ elders on navigating fear in dark times
25 votes -
Wyoming pays $150,000 to settle lawsuit over botched prosecution of hemp farmers
12 votes -
You can join thousands telling US President Donald Trump what they think of his anti-trans passport policies. Here’s how.
19 votes -
Heritage Foundation and allies discuss dismantling the EU
40 votes -
Donald Trump says he opened California’s water. Local officials say he nearly flooded them.
30 votes -
From Tuberculosis to HIV/AIDS to cancer, disease tracking has always had a political dimension, but it’s the foundation of US public health
9 votes -
Robert F. Kennedy Jr. and US influencers bash seed oils, baffling nutrition scientists
52 votes -
Investigation: We tried to buy American chips as a Russian defense manufacturer - it worked
21 votes