• Google Acquires Wiz for $32 Billion in Its Biggest Deal Ever to Boost Cloud Security
    thehackernews.com
    Mar 18, 2025Ravie LakshmananCloud Security / Enterprise SecurityGoogle is making the biggest ever acquisition in its history by purchasing cloud security company Wiz in an all-cash deal worth $32 billion."This acquisition represents an investment by Google Cloud to accelerate two large and growing trends in the AI era: improved cloud security and the ability to use multiple clouds (multicloud)," the tech giant said today.It added the acquisition, which is subject to regulatory approvals, is meant to provide customers with a "comprehensive security platform" that secures modern IT environments. Google Cloud CEO Thomas Kurian said by bringing its cloud offerings and Wiz together, the move will "spur the adoption of multicloud cybersecurity, the use of multicloud, and competition and growth in cloud computing."Wiz CEO Assaf Rappaport said it will remain an independent multicloud platform even after the deal is closed, and that it will work with other cloud companies like AWS, Azure, and Oracle.The development comes a little over three years after Google acquired Mandiant for $5.4 billion. It also arrives more than seven months after the company unsuccessfully tried to acquire Wiz for a reported price tag of $23 billion.Google's other security-related acquisitions include VirusTotal (in September 2012) and Siemplify (in January 2022).Found this article interesting? Follow us on Twitter and LinkedIn to read more exclusive content we post.SHARE
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  • New Critical AMI BMC Vulnerability Enables Remote Server Takeover and Bricking
    thehackernews.com
    Mar 18, 2025Ravie LakshmananVulnerability / Firmware SecurityA critical security vulnerability has been disclosed in AMI's MegaRAC Baseboard Management Controller (BMC) software that could allow an attacker to bypass authentication and carry out post-exploitation actions.The vulnerability, tracked as CVE-2024-54085, carries a CVSS v4 score of 10.0, indicating maximum severity."A local or remote attacker can exploit the vulnerability by accessing the remote management interfaces (Redfish) or the internal host to the BMC interface (Redfish)," firmware security company Eclypsium said in a report shared with The Hacker News."Exploitation of this vulnerability allows an attacker to remotely control the compromised server, remotely deploy malware, ransomware, firmware tampering, bricking motherboard components (BMC or potentially BIOS/UEFI), potential server physical damage (over-voltage / bricking), and indefinite reboot loops that a victim cannot stop."The vulnerability can further be weaponized to stage disruptive attacks, causing susceptible devices to continually reboot by sending malicious commands. This could then pave the way for indefinite downtime until the devices are re-provisioned.CVE-2024-54085 is the latest in a long list of security shortcomings that have been uncovered in AMI MegaRAC BMCs since December 2022. They have been collectively tracked as BMC&C -CVE-2022-40259 - Arbitrary Code Execution via Redfish APICVE-2022-40242 - Default credentials for UID = 0 shell via SSHCVE-2022-2827 - User enumeration via APICVE-2022-26872 - Password reset interception via APICVE-2022-40258 - Weak password hashes for Redfish & APICVE-2023-34329 - Authentication Bypass via HTTP Header SpoofingCVE-2023-34330 - Code injection via Dynamic Redfish Extension interfaceEclypsium noted that CVE-2024-54085 is similar to CVE-2023-34329 in that it allows for an authentication bypass with a similar impact. The vulnerability has been confirmed to affect the below devices -HPE Cray XD670 Asus RS720A-E11-RS24U ASRockRackAMI has released patches to address the flaw as of March 11, 2025. While there is no evidence that the issue has been exploited in the wild, it's essential that downstream users update their systems once OEM vendors incorporate these fixes and release them to their customers."Note that patching these vulnerabilities is a non-trivial exercise, requiring device downtime," Eclypsium said. "The vulnerability only affects AMI's BMC software stack. However, since AMI is at the top of the BIOS supply chain, the downstream impact affects over a dozen manufacturers."Found this article interesting? Follow us on Twitter and LinkedIn to read more exclusive content we post.SHARE
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  • Karl Urbans Johnny Cage Debuts in First Mortal Kombat II Photos
    screencrush.com
    2021sMortal Kombat ended with a tease promising that a sequel would add preening Hollywood star (and Mortal Kombat game veteran)Johnny Cage to the mix of characters. Sure enough, here is the sequel which is officially titledMortal Kombat IIwith Roman numerals, in keeping with the style of the old fighting games and there is Karl Urban as the new Johnny Cage. (In the 90sMortal Kombat movies, he was played by Linden Ashby an Chris Conrad.)The lastKombatmovie introduced a totally new character at the center of the story Lewis Tans Cole Young fighting in yet another version of the supernatural Mortal Kombat tournament alongside franchise stapes like Sub-Zero, Scorpion, Liu Kang, Jax, and Kung Lao. The sequel adds Cage, as well as other fan-favorite fighters like Kitana, Shao Kahn, and Baraka.You can see some of the characters in the first batch of photos from the sequel. Its directed by Simon McQuoid, who also directed 2021sMortal Kombat.Mortal Kombat II: First-Look ImagesMortal Kombat got a sequel, now with 100 percent more Johnny Cage. Here are the first images and posters. The film opens in theaters in October 2025.READ MORE: Every Video Game Movie, Ranked From Worst to BestThe firstMortal Kombatwas one of the Warner Bros. movies that debuted on (HBO) Max at the same time it opened in theaters during the Covid pandemic.As a result, itwasnt a massive box-office hit it grossed around $85 million worldwide but it supposedly proved very popular on streaming, which is a big reason why Warners decided to move forward with a sequel. (The addition of Urban as Cage is surely an attempt to add a little more star power to a series that mostly relied on the franchise itself to bring in customers the first time around.)Mortal Kombat IIis scheduled to open in theaters on October 24, 2025.Get our free mobile appThe Best Sequels Made From Bad MoviesThese good movies were continuations of the stories in bad ones.Filed Under: Karl Urban, Mortal Kombat, Mortal Kombat 2, Simon McQuoidCategories: Movie News
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  • Attention Adults: Little Debbie Just Re-Activated Your Childhood
    screencrush.com
    Now that the warmer months are easing into our lives, Little Debbie is releasing its 2025 ice cream treat lineup.The company has chosen some fan-favorite, nostalgic snacks to be activated off of the bench.All Recipes is reporting the full lineup of Little Debbie ice cream snacks that will be hitting grocery store shelves soon, and it's nothing short of spectacular.Heres the full lineup:Birthday Cake Ice Cream Bars include cake-flavored ice cream with cake pieces and colorful sprinkles mixed in.Strawberry Shortcake Rolls Ice Cream Bars include white cake-flavored ice cream with cake crumbles, with a strawberry ribbon swirled into each bite.Nutty Bars Ice Cream Bars feature a creamy peanut butter ice cream base with crunchy peanut butter pieces that have been dipped in crispy milk chocolate.Star Crunch Ice Cream Bars offer caramel ice cream with a caramel ribbon and crispy bits dipped in rich milk chocolate.Get ready to get all 2,000 of your recommended daily calories from eating these all day and night.According to Nutritionix, just one Star Crunch Ice Cream Bar has 230 calories and more than 15 grams of sugar. So if you keep your count under about eight a day, and eat nothing else, you should be good.The Little Debbie brand is one that most Americans are familiar with, and if you are reading this right now, you likely had some stashed in your backpack every day in your lunch while growing up.The brand has been around since 1960, when McKee Foods founder O.D. McKee named the treats from his bakery after his four-year-oldgranddaughter,Apparently, Debbie used to always wear that little red straw hat, and that's what inspired the picture that the brand still uses as its logo.Snacks from the '90s That Have DisappearedWas there anything better than opening your lunch box and seeing Shark Bites packed in next to some Hi-C Ecto Cooler? A simple pleasure kids of today can't experience. What other snacks came and went from our lives in the 1990s and beyond? Follow us as we look back at some '90s snacks that have since disappeared.Gallery Credit: WoodREAD MORE: Fast-Growing Chains Opening Everywhere in 202580s Foods We Wish They Still MadeIf you grew up in the 1980s, you surely have fond memories of these popular (now discontinued) snacks.Filed Under: Food, NostalgiaCategories: Longform
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  • TELUS Digital AI Data Solutions: Online Data Analyst - USA
    weworkremotely.com
    Are you a detail-oriented individual with a passion for research and a good understanding of national and local geography? This freelance opportunity allows you to work at your own pace and from the comfort of your own home. A Day in the Life of an Online Data Analyst: In this role, you will be working on a project aimed at enhancing the content and quality of digital maps that are used by millions of people worldwide Completing research and evaluation tasks in a web-based environment such as verifying and comparing data, and determining the relevance and accuracy of information. Join us today and be part of a dynamic and innovative team that is making a difference in the world! TELUS Digital AI CommunityOur global AI Community is a vibrant network of 1 million+ contributors from diverse backgrounds who help our customers collect, enhance, train, translate, and localize content to build better AI models. Become part of our growing community and make an impact supporting the machine learning models of some of the worlds largest brands. Qualification Path: No previous professional experience is required to apply to this role, however, working on this project will require you to pass the basic requirements and go through a standard assessment process. This is a part-time long-term project and your work will be subject to our standard quality assurance checks during the term of this agreement. Basic Requirements Full Professional Proficiency in English Being a resident in the US for the last 2 consecutive years and having familiarity with current and historical business, media, sport, news, social media, and cultural affairs in the US Ability to follow guidelines and conduct online research using search engines, online maps, and website information Flexibility to work across a diverse set of task types, including maps, news, audio tasks, and relevance Daily access to a broadband internet connection, computer, and relevant software Assessment In order to be hired into the program, youll take an open book qualification exam that will determine your suitability for the position and complete ID verification. Our team will provide you with guidelines and learning materials before your qualification exam. You will be required to complete the exam in a specific timeframe but at your convenience. Equal Opportunity All qualified applicants will receive consideration for a contractual relationship without regard to race, color, religion, sex, sexual orientation, gender identity, national origin, disability, or protected veteran status. At TELUS Digital AI, we are proud to offer equal opportunities and are committed to creating a diverse and inclusive community. All aspects of selection are based on applicants qualifications, merits, competence, and performance without regard to any characteristic related to diversityApply NowLet's start your dream job Apply now
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  • HIV could infect 1,400 infants every day due to US aid disruptions
    www.technologyreview.com
    Around 1,400 infants are being infected by HIV every day as a result of the new US administrations cuts to funding to AIDS organizations, new modeling suggests. In an executive order issued January 20, President Donald Trump paused new foreign aid funding to global health programs, and four days later, US Secretary of State Marco Rubio issued a stop-work order on existing foreign aid assistance. Surveys suggest that these changes forced more than a third of global organizations that provide essential HIV services to close within days of the announcements. Hundreds of thousands of people are losing access to HIV treatments as a result. Women and girls are missing out on cervical cancer screening and services for gender-based violence, too. A waiver Rubio later issued in an attempt to restore lifesaving services has had very little impact. We are in a crisis, said Jennifer Sherwood, director of research, public policy, at amfAR, the Foundation for AIDS Research, at a data-sharing event on March 17 at Columbia University in New York. Even funds that had already been appropriated, that were in the field, in peoples bank accounts, [were] frozen. Rubio approved a waiver for life-saving humanitarian assistance on January 28. This resumption is temporary in nature, and with limited exceptions as needed to continue life-saving humanitarian assistance programs, no new contracts shall be entered into, he said in a statement at the time. The US Presidents Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief (PEPFAR), which invests millions of dollars in the global AIDS response every year, was also granted a waiver February 1 to continue life-saving work. Despite this waiver, there have been devastating reports of the impact on health programs across the many low-income countries that relied on the US Agency for International Development (USAID), which oversees PEPFAR, for funding. To get a better sense of the overall impact, amfAR conducted two surveys looking at more than 150 organizations that rely on PEPFAR funding in more than 26 countries. We found really severe disruptions to HIV services, said Sherwood, who presented the findings at Columbia. About 90% of our participants said [the cuts] had severely limited their ability to deliver HIV services. Specifically, 94% of follow-up services designed to monitor peoples progress were either canceled or disrupted. There were similarly dramatic disruptions to services for HIV testing, treatment, and prevention, and 92% of services for gender-based violence were canceled or disrupted. The cuts have plunged organizations into a deep financial crisis, said Sherwood. Almost two-thirds of respondents said community-based staff were laid off before the end of January. When the team asked these organizations how long they could stay open without US funding, 36% said they had already closed. Only 14% said that they were able to stay open longer than a month, said Sherwood. And this data was collected longer than a month ago. The organizations said tens of thousands of the people they serve would lose HIV treatment within a month. For some organizations, that figure was over 100,000, said Sherwood. Part of the problem is that the stop-work order came at a time when these organizations were already experiencing shortages in commodities, Sherwood said. Typically, centers might give a person a six-month supply of antiretroviral drugs. Before the stop-work order, many organizations were only giving one-month supplies. Almost all of their clients are due to come back and pick up [more] treatments in this 90-day freeze, she said. You can really see the panic this has caused. The waiver for life-saving treatment didnt do much to remedy this situation. Only 5% of the organizations received funds under the waiver, while the vast majority either were told they didnt qualify or had not been told they could restart services. While the waiver might be one important avenue to restart some services, it cannot, on the whole, save the US HIV program, says Sherwood. It is very limited in scope, and it has not been widely communicated to the field. AmfAR isnt the only organization tracking the impact of US funding cuts. At the same event, Sara Casey, assistant professor of population and family health at Columbia, presented results of a survey of 101 people who work in organizations reliant on US aid. They reported seeing disruptions to services in humanitarian responses, gender-based violence, mental health, infectious diseases, essential medicines and vaccines, and more. Many of these should have been eligible for the life-saving waivers, Casey said. Casey and her colleagues have also been interviewing people in Colombia, Kenya, and Nepal. In those countries, women of reproductive age, newborns and children, people living with HIV, members of the LGBTQI+ community, and migrants are among those most affected by the cuts, she said, and health workers, who are primarily women, are losing their livelihoods. There will be really disproportionate impacts on the worlds most vulnerable, said Sherwood. Women make up 67% of the health-care workforce, according to the World Health Organization. They also make up 63% of PEPFAR clients. PEPFAR has supported gender equality and services for gender-based violence. We dont know if other countries or other donors can or will pick up these types of programs, especially in the face of competing priorities about keeping people on treatment and keeping people alive, said Sherwood. Sherwood and her colleagues at amfAR have also done some modeling work to determine the potential impact of cuts to PEPFAR on women and girls, using data from last year to create their estimates. Each day that the stop-work order is in place, we estimate that there are 1,400 new HIV infections among infants, she said. And every day, over 7,000 women stand to miss out on cervical cancer screenings. The funding cuts have also had a dramatic effect on mental-health services, said Farah Arabe, who serves on the advisory board of the Global Mental Health Action Network. Arabe presented the preliminary findings of an ongoing survey of mental-health organizations from 29 countries that receive US aid. Unfortunately, this is a very grim picture, she said. Only 5% of individuals who were receiving services in 2024 will be able to receive services in 2025. The same goes for children and adolescents. This is a particularly sad picture because children are going through brain development, she said. Impacts at this early stage of life have lifelong impacts on academic achievement, economic productivity, mental health, physical health even the ability to parent the next generation. For now, nonprofits and aid and research organizations are scrambling to try to understand, and potentially limit, the impact of the cuts. Some are hoping to locate new sources of funding, independent of the US. I am deeply concerned that progress in disease eradication, poverty reduction, and gender equality is at risk of being reversed, said Thoai Ngo of Columbia Universitys Mailman School of Public Health, who chaired the event. Without urgent action, preventable deaths will rise, more people will fall into poverty, and as always, women and girls will bear the heaviest burden. On March 10, Rubio announced the results of his departments review of USAID. After a 6 week review we are officially cancelling 83% of the programs at USAID, he shared via the social media platform X.
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  • iOS 18.4 Public Beta 4: Your iPhone Could Get New Emoji and More Soon
    www.cnet.com
    Developers and beta testers can use my favorite new emoji, and other new feautres, right now.
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  • Bumble Introduces ID Verification To Make Online Dating Safer
    www.cnet.com
    Users with verified profiles will receive a special badge on the dating app.
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  • RFK, Jr. Silent as EPA Weakens Mercury Pollution Rules
    www.scientificamerican.com
    March 18, 20256 min readRFK, Jr., Once Poisoned by Mercury, Is Silent as EPA Weakens Rules against ItRFK, Jr. fought mercury pollution for years, but he is now in an administration that wants to make it easier for industries to dump it into the air and waterBy Ariel Wittenberg & E&E News Robert F. Kennedy Jr. testifies during his Senate Finance Committee confirmation hearing in Dirksen building on Wednesday, January 29, 2025. Tom Williams/CQ-Roll Call, Inc via Getty ImagesCLIMATEWIRE | The last time President Donald Trump tried to roll back a mercury regulation, he faced a high-profile opponent: Robert F. Kennedy Jr.Kennedy railed against EPA at an August 2017 public hearing for going along with the Trump administrations demands to repeal wastewater limits. He warned that allowing more power plant pollution to enter waterways would poison people through mercury-contaminated fish a problem he experienced personally after a period of eating tuna."It is really troublesome for those of us who will suffer from your irresponsibility," Kennedy said at the time. "The law says the waterways of this country, the fisheries of this country, belong to the people."On supporting science journalismIf you're enjoying this article, consider supporting our award-winning journalism by subscribing. By purchasing a subscription you are helping to ensure the future of impactful stories about the discoveries and ideas shaping our world today.Eight years later, Kennedy has been silent as the Trump administration is again rolling back those same mercury regulations, along with at least a dozen other pollution controls announced last week in what EPA Administrator Lee Zeldin has called the agency's "biggest deregulatory action in U.S. history."Before Kennedy was confirmed in January to lead the Department of Health and Human Services, he ran a presidential campaign on the promise to "make America healthy again," in part through getting toxic chemicals out of the nation's food.Then, during his confirmation hearing two months ago, Kennedy touted his experience with fighting mercury pollution as an environmental attorney and as the founder of Waterkeeper, an environmental group. "The same chemicals that kill fish make people sick," Kennedy said at the January hearing.Kennedy didn't respond to requests for comment or questions about whether he still believes mercury is a public health threat."If he really does care about the issues he used to care about when he was working at the Waterkeeper, you would think he would say something," said Abel Russ, director of the Environmental Integrity Project's Center for Applied Environmental Science. "EPA is doing a lot of things that are an anathema to his stated life's mission."If EPA fulfills Zeldin's promise to roll back at least a dozen pollution controls, more people could be exposed to particulate matter, smog and nitrogen oxides pollutants that can lead to severe health consequences such as lowered IQ, asthma, increased heart attacks and premature deaths, according to EPA's own analyses.Among the threatened rules are two mercury reduction standards. One limits the amount of mercury that's released into the air and is predicted to reduce emissions of the potent neurotoxin by more than 16 percent by 2028. The other reduces mercury that's released into rivers and streams, and would help infants avoid losing an estimated 1,377 IQ points annually.It's not publicly known whether Kennedy weighed in on EPA's decisions. Before the election, Trump said he would let Kennedy make our country so healthy but that Kennedy cant touch fossil fuels like oil and gas."We're not going to let him get involved," Trump said in October.Since then, Trump created a Make America Healthy Commission with the purpose of "ensuring United States food is the healthiest ... in the world" and addressing potential contributing causes of childhood chronic disease, "including the American diet, absorption of toxic material ... environmental factors [and] government policies."The commission, on which Kennedy and Zeldin sit, met for the first time last Tuesday, one day before EPA's rollbacks were announced. The meeting was held behind closed doors and neither EPA or HHS responded to questions about whether Kennedy and Zeldin had discussed rolling back the rules or how the rollbacks would impact Americans health.EPA spokesperson Molly Vaseliou said in a statement, "No longer will the EPA view the goals of protecting our environment and growing our economy as binary choices."She did not respond to a question about what specific steps EPA would take to improve Americans health, saying only that the agency "looks forward to closely collaborating on ways to fulfill President Trump's goal of removing toxins from the environment and our food supply and keeping our children healthy and strong."Fish consumption is dangerous nowMercury is a neurotoxin that can harm the brain and nervous system, leading to lower IQ and behavioral problems. It primarily enters rivers and lakes through wastewater from power plants and factories, or in air emissions that settle on waterways.Once in the water, bacteria convert it to a more toxic form called methylmercury that is easily taken up by fish and other aquatic organisms. The mercury remains in their bodies for long periods of time, and can be transferred from prey to predator when other fish or people eat contaminated animals.Mercury can harm anyone's cognition, but exposure is especially dangerous for infants and toddlers. Pregnant people are encouraged to avoid eating fish like tuna and swordfish to protect their fetuses' developing nervous systems.Kennedy himself has experienced mercury poisoning from fish consumption.He has said he discovered "dangerous levels of mercury" in his blood after having "word retrieval problems and memory problems that I never had before" in the early 2000s."Our fish consumption is dangerous now," he said in 2017. "In my view, we are living in a science-fiction nightmare at this point in this country."Kennedy has not minced words when blaming the coal industry for poisoning the nation's fish.After EPA wrote its first-ever limits on mercury air emissions in 2012, Kennedy wrote an op-ed touting the health benefits of the rule, which was projected to prevent 4,000 to 11,000 premature deaths. He argued that it would stop coal barons and mining magnates ... profiting from poisoning the rest of us.Anti-fishToday, Kennedy is perhaps better known for spreading falsehoods about vaccines than he is for environmental advocacy. But his concerns about vaccines were, at least initially, rooted in fears about mercurys neurotoxic effects. In 2005, Kennedy wrote an article in Rolling Stone magazine to claim that a mercury-based preservative in vaccines was causing autism in healthy children a link that has been debunked in multiple studies. The magazine article was later retracted.The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention says there is no evidence of harm by the preservative, thimerosal, that was in some vaccines. (Thimerosal was removed from U.S. childhood vaccines in 2001 under an agreement involving manufacturers, federal agencies and the American Academy of Pediatrics, four years before Kennedy's article was published.)In January, Kennedy drew a connection between vaccines and fish during his confirmation hearing. He told senators who had expressed concern about his promotion of vaccine conspiracy theories that it was unfair to call him an anti-vaxer because, "I worked for years to reduce mercury and toxic chemicals in fish, and nobody called me anti-fish."Consuming contaminated seafood is still the most common pathway for mercury exposure. Surveillance testing by the Food and Drug Administration that has examined the presence of chemicals in foods at grocery stores showed that fish contain higher levels of mercury than other foods.Canned tuna had an average concentration of 230 parts per billion of mercury in tests conducted from 2018 to 2020. Cod had 87 parts per billion and salmon had 21 parts per billion. By comparison, store-bought cornbread had an average mercury concentration of 3.3 parts per billion, the highest level found in a food that was not fish.Kennedy has used his Cabinet position as health secretary to put food-additive companies on notice about adding dyes and chemicals in food.But there is a limit to what HHS can do to limit mercury's presence in fish because environmental contamination is the main source of the neurotoxin. Though HHS offers advice to consumers on which species of fish would likely to have lower mercury content, actually preventing contamination stems from EPA's pollution rules.That those rules are a target of Trump's rollbacks show the limits of Kennedy's mission, said John Walke, director of the Natural Resources Defense Council's Federal Clean Air Program."The EPA action to increase toxic mercury pollution speaks far louder than the 'make America healthy again' words about mercury's dangers," he said. "Whatever talk and it's just talk was had from the MAHA side of this administration about mercury poisoning clearly has no impact on actions at EPA."Reprinted from E&E News with permission from POLITICO, LLC. Copyright 2025. E&E News provides essential news for energy and environment professionals.
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  • A Neurodivergent Journey, Armored Dinosaurs and the Dark Sector
    www.scientificamerican.com
    March 18, 20253 min readA Neurodivergent Journey, Armored Dinosaurs and the Dark SectorIn the April issue of SciAm, follow a mans journey to a diagnosis, learn about exciting new schizophrenia treatments, and moreBy Jeanna Bryner Scientific American, April 2025When I first came across the term neurodivergent, after it was coined about 25 years ago by activist Kassiane Asasumasu, I didnt realize the weight it would hold in society. The nonjudgmental label, which describes people with attention deficit hyperactivity disorder, autism, tics, and many other brain-based phenomena, indicates a divergence from the typical rather than a deficit. Now, after Ive interacted with many diverse humans and begun raising kids whose minds and behaviors consistently both baffle and amaze me, the term feels personal: one of my main goals as a parent has been to engender in my children kindness and openness toward all that is different.Journalist Paul Marino describes his own experience with neurodivergence: a decades-long search for a diagnosis to explain a recurring burst of involuntary movements that involve flickering his fingers rapidly on either side of his face. At one point in high school Marino was so embarrassed by this motoring (which he now knows is a kind of complex motor stereotypy, or CMS) that he wrapped his fingers together with Scotch tape. He describes his journey in intimate and honest language. After reading his story, I better understood not only the fascinating ways the human brain can shape thoughts and behaviors but also how being yourself can be the best medicine. As one neurologist told Marino, a better world would be one in which we did not pathologize CMS but erased its stigma. I will share this touching feature with a loved one with tics who is incredibly kind, athletic, compassionate, smart ... and be open to sharing with others why they make noises or wink for seemingly no reason.Sometimes dysfunction in the brain can lead to mental health conditions such as schizophrenia, which is characterized by delusions and disordered thinking, among other symptoms, that can be debilitating. Journalist Diana Kwon tells us how a promising new type of drug and other advances reveal a picture of the illness that is more complex than anyone had realized.On supporting science journalismIf you're enjoying this article, consider supporting our award-winning journalism by subscribing. By purchasing a subscription you are helping to ensure the future of impactful stories about the discoveries and ideas shaping our world today.Our cover story looks at another complex puzzle. Galaxies, including ours, bathe in oceans of dark matter, which communicates with our world mainly through gravity. The problem is physicists have yet to uncover the identity of this invisible stuff. For the past 30-some years they have searched for individual hypothetical dark matter particles, to no avail. Now theoretical physicist Kathryn Zurek provocatively describes how dark matter may in fact be a whole hidden sector of dark particles and forces that could combine and interact, just as visible matter does. New experiments to detect quantum disturbances in special materials could tease out this parallel world.Scientific American senior news reporter Meghan Bartels follows two beloved spacecraft, Voyagers 1 and 2, on their epic tour past the outer planets, across the edge of the suns influence (the heliosphere) and into interstellar space. Along the way, youll see how these iconic missions have upended what scientists thought they knew about the great beyond.Hurricane Katrina, which barreled onto the Gulf Coast 20 years ago in August, was a turning point in the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers approach to disaster-risk reduction. If levees and dams hadnt deprived healthy marshes of their sediments, they could have acted as baffles to the storms deadly sea surges. Now the Corps is leaning into nature-based solutions. Author Erica Gies writes about some of the most promising Corps projects that work with nature, along with some of the setbacks.The horned and armored dinosaurs of the Mesozoic were not to be messed with: recently discovered, exquisitely preserved fossils of two such beasts show details of their weaponry never seen before, suggesting some of the bulky spikes, blades, plates and horns of dinosaurs were far larger and tougher than previously thought. Paleontologist Michael B. Habib has great fun describing this research and what it means for a long-running debate about the function of these superb accoutrements.
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