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13 votes
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ReTuna shopping mall in Sweden is the first in the world to sell only secondhand and repurposed items – established in 2015, it's a municipality-led experiment in circular consumption
25 votes -
Brazil's publicly funded payment system is pretty cool
32 votes -
A huge fight looms over the NASA budget this fall
26 votes -
Why is the world's most powerful quantum computer being built in Denmark? Atom Computing and Microsoft working at backend to set up computer.
7 votes -
What's next for public television and radio in the US after Republicans strip funding?
21 votes -
Why US anti-trans campaigns keep returning to the politics of meat
21 votes -
Peak went from a cancelled game that couldn't get funding to selling millions on Steam – result of a killer collaboration between Aggro Crab and Landfall Games
19 votes -
Decades of searching and a chance discovery: Why finding Leadbeater’s possum in New South Wales is such big news
5 votes -
Inside arXiv — the most transformative platform in all of science
22 votes -
Diseases are spreading. The US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention isn't warning the public like it was months ago.
31 votes -
US President Donald Trump seeks to cancel NASA’s Mars Sample Return
34 votes -
All four major web browsers are about to lose 80% of their funding
55 votes -
Norway has launched a new scheme to lure top international researchers amid growing pressure on academic freedom in the US
11 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 -
CISA extends funding to ensure 'no lapse in critical CVE services'
15 votes -
Finland's bid to win Europe's start-up crown – country has spawned twelve unicorn businesses (firms worth a billion dollars or more) like Oura, Supercell, Rovio, and Wolt
16 votes -
Norwegian government submits bill to parliament that would allow municipalities to charge a 3% tourist tax on paid overnight stays, including hotels, campsites, and Airbnb rentals
24 votes -
As NASA faces cuts, China reveals ambitious plans for planetary exploration
16 votes -
Andrew Jackson ‘paralyzed’ Washington with cuts
12 votes -
Across the world, conservation projects reel after abrupt US funding cuts
10 votes -
Canoo files bankruptcy, claiming funding shortfalls
21 votes -
Novo Nordisk rebuked by UK watchdog over failure to disclose payments to health groups – Danish drug giant found to have failed to accurately report spending even after admitting to errors
13 votes -
US rural electric co-ops secure $4.37 billion in clean energy funding
19 votes -
Arctic foxes were almost hunted to extinction in Sweden, Norway and Finland. Can projects to breed and feed them help this native species return for good?
6 votes -
GM exits robotaxi market, will bring Cruise operations in house
11 votes -
Costs from hurricane Helene more than $53 billion in North Carolina. Currently available funding is significantly less than that.
14 votes -
Swedish battery cell maker Northvolt, which produces cells for electric vehicles, has announced that it has filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy in the US
6 votes -
US awards $1.5 billion in grants to improve passenger rail along Northeast Corridor
18 votes -
NGI Mobifree grants awarded for fair mobile software
6 votes -
US voters greenlight over $25 billion in public transportation ballot measures in 2024
47 votes -
Subsea pumped storage tech secures funding from US, German governments
10 votes -
Amtrak Wolverine (MI), Southwest Chief (AZ) services to see design advancements, right-of-way acquisition with $126 million in grants
12 votes -
US Joe Biden–Kamala Harris administration announces $45 million to reduce electric vehicle battery recycling costs
29 votes -
US Joe Biden-Kamala Harris administration announces $3 billion of investments in clean ports
24 votes -
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36 votes -
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5 votes -
US Bipartisan Infrastructure Law to invest $76 million closing legacy oil & gas wells in Pennsylvania
16 votes -
How to plan a transit network for the future
6 votes -
Stable Diffusion creators launch Black Forest Labs, secure $31M for FLUX.1 AI image generator
11 votes -
FOSS funding vanishes from EU's 2025 Horizon program plans. Elimination of most Next Generation Internet funding 'incomprehensible,' says OW2 CEO Pierre-Yves Gibello.
28 votes -
US Environmental Protection Agency awards $4.3 billion to fund projects in thirty states to reduce climate pollution
28 votes -
Helsinki's incredibly well executed Jokeri light rail project – finished way ahead of schedule and costs lower than initially budgeted
24 votes -
Inside Ziklag, the secret organization of wealthy Christians trying to sway the US election and change the country
22 votes -
Iceland's startup scene is punching above its weight – dodging the venture capital doldrums, Frumtak Ventures lands $87M for its fourth fund
5 votes -
MTA stops work on Second Ave. subway amid congestion pricing confusion in New York City
14 votes -
Meme weeding: High wages and Baumol’s cost disease
10 votes -
Banana giant corporation Chiquita held liable by US court for funding paramilitaries
38 votes -
US economists report on an intervention that helps low-income families beat the poverty trap
17 votes -
Silicon Valley’s best kept secret: Founder liquidity
12 votes