• FIN7 Deploys Anubis Backdoor to Hijack Windows Systems via Compromised SharePoint Sites
    thehackernews.com
    Apr 02, 2025Ravie LakshmananRansomware / Email SecurityThe financially motivated threat actor known as FIN7 has been linked to a Python-based backdoor called Anubis (not to be confused with an Android banking trojan of the same name) that can grant them remote access to compromised Windows systems."This malware allows attackers to execute remote shell commands and other system operations, giving them full control over an infected machine," Swiss cybersecurity company PRODAFT said in a technical report of the malware.FIN7, also called Carbon Spider, ELBRUS, Gold Niagara, Sangria Tempest, and Savage Ladybug, is a Russian cybercrime group known for its ever-evolving and expanding set of malware families for obtaining initial access and data exfiltration. In recent years, the threat actor is said to have transitioned to a ransomware affiliate.In July 2024, the group was observed using various online aliases to advertise a tool called AuKill (aka AvNeutralizer) that's capable of terminating security tools in a likely attempt to diversify its monetization strategy.Anubis is believed to be propagated via malspam campaigns that typically entice victims into executing the payload hosted on compromised SharePoint sites.Delivered in the form of a ZIP archive, the entry point of the infection is a Python script that's designed to decrypt and execute the main obfuscated payload directly in memory. Once launched, the backdoor establishes communications with a remote server over a TCP socket in Base64-encoded format.The responses from the server, also Base64-encoded, allow it to gather the IP address of the host, upload/download files, change the current working directory, grab environment variables, alter Windows Registry, load DLL files into memory using PythonMemoryModule, and terminate itself.In an independent analysis of Anubis, German security company GDATA said the backdoor also supports the ability to run operator-provided responses as a shell command on the victim system."This enables attackers to perform actions such as keylogging, taking screenshots, or stealing passwords without directly storing these capabilities on the infected system," PRODAFT said. "By keeping the backdoor as lightweight as possible, they reduce the risk of detection while maintaining flexibility for executing further malicious activities."Found this article interesting? Follow us on Twitter and LinkedIn to read more exclusive content we post.SHARE
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  • Housing crisis solutions: finalists for Davidson Prize 2025 revealed
    www.architectsjournal.co.uk
    This years competition, again with a prize purse of 25,000, seeks inventive design proposals to transform any site in the UK into a cohesive and integrated community of at least 300 new homes.The brief responds to the governments ambitious goal of building 1.5 million homes over the next five years. Concepts will be expected to zoom in on the experiential aspects of typical living spaces and provide solutions to ensure quality as well as quantity remains part of the outcome.The 16-strong longlist (see full details below) includes Ash Sakula, Patch Collective, Clifton Emery Design, daab Design Architects, Morris+Company, RCKa, Studio Woodroffe Papa, and The Place Bureau.AdvertisementThe annual prize recognises the best of transformative architecture of the home. It is open to multidisciplinary teams featuring at least one ARB or RIAI-registered architect. Each year, three shortlisted teams receive 5,000, while the overall winner takes home a further 10,000.The award is named after architect, visualiser and Hayes Davidson founder Alan Davidson, who died of motor neurone disease in 2018. For 2025, The Davidson Prize is partnering with leading visualisation studio Hayes Davidson, which will provide creative consultation and provide the winner with an additional week of support to help them engage with key decision makers.Jury chair Pooja Agrawal architect, planner and chief executive of Public Practice said: One of the great things about The Davidson Prize is the way it brings together multidisciplinary teams. For me thats not just about bringing together different professional skill sets, but also peoples lived experiences after all housing is about peoples homes.The range of proposals we assessed were varied, tackling finance, typologies and planning. There were so many interesting ideas to learn from and collectively they provided a vision for what the future of housing in the UK could look like.Akil Scafe-Smith, jury member and director of Resolve Collective said:This year's submissions creatively addressed a variety of contexts in responseto The Davidson Prize's challenge. It was particularly moving to see the vision and feel the energy of the non-London and Northern England based proposals and I'm excited to get into choosing the three finalists.AdvertisementThis years theme is Streets Ahead: The Race to Build 1.5M Homes. It asks collaborative teams to draw up compelling visual arguments for a minimum of 300 new homes on a site of their choice anywhere in the UK or Ireland.Last years Davidson Prize was won by The Apartment Store a concept to reinvent empty retail space as homes designed by Studio Saar with Landstory, Stories, BAS and Megaphone. The 2023 Davidson Prize was won by Helping Hands, drawn up by a team led by Liverpools Studio MUTT and collaborative research outfit Neighbourhood.The inaugural contest in 2021 was won by a team led by Haptic Architects under the banner HomeForest and featuring poet Lionheart, designer Yaoyao Meng, digital designers Squint/Opera and musicians Coda to Coda. The teams biophilic design aimed to bring the restorative effects of nature inside, [and] playfully blend digital and physical worlds to soften the constraints of working from home.Alongside Agrawal and Scafe-Smith, the judging panel includes Jonny Buckland, creative partner at Studio Saar and 2024 Davidson Prize winner; Lucy Watson, commissioning editor, House & Home at The Financial Times; and Jonathan Falkingham, founder and director of Urban Splash.The next stage will see three teams shortlisted and paid5,000 each to further develop their concept. The overall winner will be announced in June.daab Design Architects, HomeGrown Plus, Expedition Engineering, Robert Bird Group, Third Revolution Projects, Atelier Crescendo Between the Lines - Living with IndustryThe Davidson Prize 2025 longlistF.U.N.N.E.L by A IS FOR ARCHITECTURE, WSP, SpacehubHardworking Landscapes by AOMD, Edit, Periscope, Dion Barrett, Ruth Lang1 House, 2 Homes... make a neighbourhood by Ash Sakula with Human NatureWearWork by CARD Projects, PATCH Collective, and System of Systems300 Homes within a Union Street Mile by Clifton Emery Design, Nudge Community Builders, Millfields Trust, Plymouth Energy Community, Devon and Cornwall Planning ConsultantsBetween the Lines Living with Industry by daab Design Architects, HomeGrown Plus, Expedition Engineering, Robert Bird Group, Third Revolution Projects, Atelier CrescendoPermitted Development + by Elephant in the City Morris+Company, Hub, Stantec / Hydrock, Studio Knight StokoePositive Disturbance Realising Brownfield Potential by FLOC, MAZi, Hyem, Stef Leach, Broaden, Thurston Illustration, SHED, Artis, Henna AsikainenMetroland by Harper Perry, Urban Design Works and Studio Mint with North East Combined Authority and NEXUS Tyne and Wear MetroThe Rail Belt by James Waddington with Nathaniel Welham and WSPBeta Boroughs How Could Better Data Help Us Beat the Housing Crisis? by RCKaKommuna Palace by Studio Woodroffe Papa, Lawrence Barth, Almitra Roosevelt and Anagha Othalur of AA Housing and Urbanism, Whitby Wood, XCO2Forever Island A New Model for Young Islanders by The Place BureauGrowing Places by University of West England StudentsLiving in the Landscape A community for all ages by William Burgess & Oliver BurgessRUN! by Yolande Barnes Consulting & Space SyntaxWilliam Burgess & Oliver Burgess Living in the Landscape - A community for all ages
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  • HTA and Concrete reveal Battersea tower plans
    www.architectsjournal.co.uk
    The Wandsworth tower, called Nest Battersea, would provide 147 flats, as well as 500m of commercial space near to the London Heliport.It would be built close to the Thames, on the site of Heliport House, a vacant five-storey office block, and two industrial garages, which would all be demolished to make way for the new plans.The building is earmarked for the same site as Will Alsops planned 15-storey Heliport Heights tower block, which gained planning permission in 2014.AdvertisementThe mixed-use scheme on stilts, which would have been the late Alsops last in London, was never built.The Alsop plan was for 14 flats one on each floor with a duplex at the top none of which would have been designated affordable. A third of the homes in HTAs scheme will be affordable. About 15 will be wheelchair-accessible.The building will be fitted with air-source heat pumps and solar panels, and will also use a waste water heat recovery system.The architects aim to minimise emissions by reusing demolition waste on site, as well as using 100 per cent recycled rebar and window frames with high recycled aluminium content. The building will also be fitted with centralised ambient loop air heating conditioning systems and mechanical ventilation with heat recovery.The scheme will also feature some improvements to the local public realm, including new planting and signage on the riverfront. Also included within the block itself will be a roof garden and childrens play area.AdvertisementDevelopers said that they were breathing new life into a part of Battersea thats been under-utilised for too long. Despite the marketings focus on local regeneration, a promotional video for the scheme uses imagery from the South Bank and Westminster Bridge Road, several miles away.London heliport bosses said they wanted to look at more detailed plans before commenting. The developers said they had consulted with aviation experts and did not foresee any issues.Consultation on the initial plans took place in February this year. Planning consultants told the AJ that 20,000 people had visited the portal.Concrete Amsterdam worked as concept architects, with HTA drawing up more detailed designs.The project team hopes to get through the planning phase in the next two years.HTA, the AJ100 Employer of the Year, delivered the masterplan for the nearby Winstanley estate regeneration for Wandsworth Council and Taylor Wimpey.The private developers exited the 2,250 home scheme in January, with HTAs role in the future of the project left unclear.Will Alsop's RA Summer Exhibition-winning model of his Heliport Heights scheme
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  • Nintendo's final Switch 2 tease shows mysterious C button
    www.eurogamer.net
    The Switch 2's most mysterious button has been teased by Nintendo, ahead of the new console's full unveiling in just a few hours. Read more
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  • The Art Assassins Creed Shadows by Darek Zabrocki
    www.iamag.co
    cookielawinfo-checkbox-analytics11 monthsThis cookie is set by GDPR Cookie Consent plugin. The cookie is used to store the user consent for the cookies in the category "Analytics".cookielawinfo-checkbox-functional11 monthsThe cookie is set by GDPR cookie consent to record the user consent for the cookies in the category "Functional".cookielawinfo-checkbox-necessary11 monthsThis cookie is set by GDPR Cookie Consent plugin. The cookies is used to store the user consent for the cookies in the category "Necessary".cookielawinfo-checkbox-others11 monthsThis cookie is set by GDPR Cookie Consent plugin. The cookie is used to store the user consent for the cookies in the category "Other.cookielawinfo-checkbox-performance11 monthsThis cookie is set by GDPR Cookie Consent plugin. The cookie is used to store the user consent for the cookies in the category "Performance".viewed_cookie_policy11 monthsThe cookie is set by the GDPR Cookie Consent plugin and is used to store whether or not user has consented to the use of cookies. It does not store any personal data.
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  • Genki Is Hosting Its Own Switch 2 Accessories 'Direct' Later Today
    www.nintendolife.com
    Subscribe to Nintendo Life on YouTube801kAccessory manufacturer Genki which became infamous for its Switch 2 teases earlier this year is hosting its own 'Direct' presentation later today at 9am PT / 12pm ET / 5pm BST / 6pm CEST / 2am AET (Thursday), promising roughly just one minute of accessory reveals for the Nintendo Switch 2.At first, we thought this was some elaborate April Fool's joke, but it seems that it's merely a fun way for Genki to present its wares after the upcoming Switch 2 Direct from Nintendo. A link is attached to the video that takes you to the 'NS2 Accessories' page on Genki's website, but it's currently empty at the time of writing.Needless to say, we reckon we'll be seeing products such as Joy-Con grips, carry cases, screen protectors, and maybe even a Bluetooth controller or two.Either way, the flood gates are about to open, and you can bet that Genki won't be the only brand looking to promote its Switch 2 accessories once Nintendo is done with its highly-anticipated Direct. Speaking of which, we'll have our live blog going up at 5am PT / 8am ET / 1pm BST / 2pm CEST / 10pm AET, with the presentation itself kicking off one hour later. Be sure to join us, if you can. It's time for Switch 2We're getting close...What kind of accessories will you be looking to pick up for your Switch 2? Let us know with a comment in the usual place.[source youtube.com]See AlsoShare:00 Nintendo Lifes resident horror fanatic, when hes not knee-deep in Resident Evil and Silent Hill lore, Ollie likes to dive into a good horror book while nursing a lovely cup of tea. He also enjoys long walks and listens to everything from TOOL to Chuck Berry. Hold on there, you need to login to post a comment...Related ArticlesNintendo Switch 2 Direct: Time, Where To Watch, What To ExpectIt's time for Switch 2Rumour: Nintendo Switch 2 To Launch In June With 3-Phase Software PlanGoing through phaazesThe Duration Of Tomorrow's Nintendo Switch 2 Direct Has Been ConfirmedIt's gonna be a long one
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  • Korean Army Validates Meltio Metal 3D Printing in First Asian Deployment
    3dprintingindustry.com
    Meltio, the Spanish developer of wire-laser metal 3D printing solutions, has announced a key milestone in its expansion into the defense sector: the Republic of Korea Army has officially validated and deployed Meltios technology. This marks the first validation of Meltios technology by a military force in Asia, expanding Meltios global footprint across defense forces following earlier integrations by the U.S., French, and Spanish militaries.In collaboration with Korean partner AM Solutions, Meltios system has been introduced by the Republic of Korea Marine Corps Logistics Group. The unit is now using its robot-based, mobile 3D metal printer to manufacture discontinued and hard-to-source components on demand.Mobile metal 3D printing enters Korean defenseThe Korean Marine Corps Logistics Group is the first military unit in the country to adopt a mobile robotic metal 3D printer. The unit is using a containerized Meltio system to support amphibious assault vehicles (KAAV), aiming to reduce downtime and logistical dependency on external supply chains.Lieutenant Colonel Kim Seong-nam, commander of the units maintenance battalion, emphasized the significance of this move in reducing costs and preventing delays: We will maintain the best logistics support system to enable stable maintenance support.The 3D printer uses Meltios Laser Wire Directed Energy Deposition (LW-DED) process, melting wire feedstock using a laser to create fully dense metal parts layer by layer. The process enables flexible use of stainless steel, titanium, copper, Inconel, and other alloys, while reducing material waste compared to powder-based systems.Laser Wire Directed Energy Deposition (LW-DED) setup inside a mobile manufacturing unit. Photo via MeltioStrategic partnerships and global defense integrationMeltios Engine Integration Kit, used in this deployment, turns robotic arms into large-scale metal 3D printers. The system is compatible with ABB, Kuka, Fanuc, and Yaskawa, offering flexibility and scale for field or factory use.This entry into the defense sector is just the beginning, said Daejung Kim, CEO of AM Solutions. Through a continuous partnership with Meltio, we aim to lead Koreas advanced industries in other sectors requiring additive manufacturing.Adam Hourigan, Meltio Sales Manager for APAC, added: The defense sector is strategic for Meltio. Thanks to collaboration with key partners in Asia, were helping the Korean Army gain autonomy in creating and repairing critical parts reliably and sustainably.Laser Wire DED printhead. Photo via Meltio.Global validation from sea to skyThis move follows Meltios validation by multiple global military forces. The companys hybrid system was deployed on the USS Bataan, enabling onboard production of a replacement sprayer plate in five days, a process that would have otherwise taken weeks. This deployment earned Meltio the U.S. Department of Defense XTechInternational award, recognizing it as a strategic technology partner.Elsewhere, the French Navy has used Meltio M450 systems aboard the Charles de Gaulle aircraft carrier, while the Spanish Air Force and Army use Meltio printers for jet engine maintenance and vehicle spare parts manufacturing, respectively.Meltio has continued to expand its portfolio of metal additive manufacturing solutions. In 2024, it launched the M600 metal 3D printer for industrial-scale production, and introduced Meltio Space robotic slicing software alongside the Meltio Robot Cell, a turnkey solution for metal part manufacturing using industrial arms.In the U.S., Meltio partnered with Accufacture to release a large-scale DED 3D printer. Most recently, the company surpassed 500 global printer sales and reported 50% year-over-year revenue growth, underscoring its ascent in the metal 3D printing market.Watch the Korean integration in action below.Subscribe to the 3D Printing Industry newsletter to keep up with the latest 3D printing news.You can also follow us on LinkedIn and subscribe to the 3D Printing Industry YouTube channel for more exclusive content.Featured image shows Korean Marine Corps technicians operating a robotic metal 3D printer for field maintenance. Image via the Republic of Korea Marine Corps / AM Solutions.
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  • Niagara simulation Cache for in game cinematic. or vat houidni..?
    realtimevfx.com
    Hello, I realized that Niagara simulation can be Cache.( particle, fluid, )in game scene, niagara real time simulation can be heavy. so think about change all as a cache.not sure is it good choice. cause not sure cache is safe for Ps5, switch platformsthere is another choice is Vat using houdini. but i dont know houdini that much. it it will take a lot of time to learn and vat texture is heavy alsomy personal taste is not learning houdini, focus on unreal niagara,material and cache but need opinion from here
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  • A bugs life: towards a probiotic architecture
    www.architectural-review.com
    The battle against bacteria has shaped modern architecture, but the health of humans as well as the planet depends on letting the bugs inArchitecture and illnesses have always been entangled. Itcould even be argued that the beginning of architecture is the beginning of disease. As doctor Benjamin Ward Richardson put it when introducing Our Homes and Howto Make them Healthy, a compendium of texts by doctors and architects for the 1884 International Health Exhibition in London: Man, by a knowledge and skill not possessed by the inferior animals, in building cities, villages, houses, for his protection from the external elements, has produced for himself a series of fatal diseases, which are so closely associated with the productions of hisknowledge and skill in building as to stand in the position of effect from cause. Man in constructing protections from exposure has constructed conditions of disease.Doctors and architects have always been in a kind of dance, often exchanging roles, collaborating and influencing each other, even if not always synchronised. Imhotep, the Egyptian architect of the step pyramid of Djoser at Saqqara of 2600 BCE, was also a physician and the author of many medical treatises more than two millennia before Hippocrates, usually considered the father of medicine. Vitruvius in the 1st century BCE launched western architectural theory by insisting that all architects needed to study medicine: Healthfulness being their chief object. He devoted a large part ofhis Ten Books on Architecture to the question of health, giving detailed instructions on how to determine the healthiness of a proposed site for a city by returning to the ancient method of sacrificing an animal that lives there and inspecting its liver to make sure it is sound and firm. Likewise for the health of buildings, he discussed the theory of the four humours, which was the dominant medical theory of the time. Vitruvius even argued that those who areunwell can be cured more quickly through design, rebuilding the system of those exhausted by disease including consumption, now known as tuberculosis.In 1985, architect Lina Bo Bardi curated the exhibition Entreato para Crianas (Interlude for Children). The poster included the architect as a toddler anddrawings of insects alongside the words dont step on the ants, dont killthe cockroaches.Credit:Instituto Lina Bo and PM Bardi / Casa de VidroElsewhere, architects and planners have long waged wars against bugs. InLubumbashi, in the Democratic Republic of the Congo, disease spread by flies and mosquitoes was used byBelgian colonialists to justify a cordon sanitaire. Sammy Balojis Essay on Urban Planning documents its lasting urban legacyCredit:Photo (detail): Alessandra Bello / Courtesy of Sammy Baloji and Imane Fars Gallery, ParisEvery subsequent architectural theory added something to this medical paradigm. Cities represent an accumulation of theories ofdisease from ancient times to the present. The history of architecture and the history of the city is the history of disease, thehistory of a series of structures and infrastructures put in place to counter the previous epidemic, as if it was always a step behind. From new building types, such as the lazaretti in 15thcentury Italy, designed to contain those infected by the plague, or suspected to beinfected, to the great infrastructure works of the 19th century: sewage systems, clean water, urban grids and parks that completely reshaped cities in the name of health.Modern architecture was produced under emergency conditions. Throughout the late 19th century and the first half of the 20th, millions died of tuberculosis every year all over the world. Modern buildings offered a prophylactic defence against this invisible micro-organism, the tuberculosis bacillus that was only identified in1882 by Robert Koch. All the defining features of modern architecture white walls, terraces, big windows, detachment fromthe ground were presented as both prevention and cure. LeCorbusier, for example, wrote that pilotis separated the housefrom the humid ground where disease breeds.Cities represent an accumulation of theories ofdisease from ancient times to the presentTo produce the idea of modern architecture as healthy, 19thcentury architecture was demonised as nervous, unhealthy andfilled with disease, especially the bacilli of tuberculosis. Decorative excess was itself treated as an infection. Modernising architecture was firstly a form of disinfection, a purification of buildings leading to a healthgiving environment of light, air, cleanliness and smooth white surfaces without cracks or crevices where contagion might lurk.It was not until 1928 that the first modern antibiotic, penicillin, was accidentally discovered by Alexander Fleming when he observedthat mould stopped the growth of bacteria, unknowingly reactivating an ancient knowledge; Imhotep had already applied mouldy bread to skin infections, and plants with antibacterial properties have been central to the health practices of many Indigenous communities all over the world for thousands of years. Streptomycin, the first antibiotic effective against tuberculosis, wasnot discovered until 1943 and not widely available for a decade but there was already an antibiotic philosophy of architecture. Modern architecture was the antibiotic. It was modern inasmuch asit was free of bacteria, particularly the bacillus of tuberculosis. Inthat sense, it saved lives.In response to the tuberculosis epidemic in the late 19th and first half of the 20th century, modernist sanatoria prioritised access to direct sunlight.The rooms of Lake County Tuberculosis Sanatorium, built in 1939 to designs by William Ganster and William Pereira and appearing on the cover of Revista Nacional de Arquitectura in 1952 (left), all faced south to maximise sun exposure. In todays hospitals, sky ceilings imitate natural light and vegetation, as captured in Lewis Khans Theatre series (lead image), started in 2014Credit:Colegio Oficial de Arquitectos de Madrid (COAM) and Lewis KhanThe medicinal nature of modern architecture and the unimaginable horror it was responding to has been largely forgotten. We act as if each pandemic is the first, as if trying to bury the pain and uncertainty of the past. In the early days of the Covid19 pandemic in 2020, buildings designed for temporary events hosted an emergency medical architecture, a space for disease. The scene was repeated all over the world, from Belgrade to Lahore, Wuhan toKuala Lumpur, So Paulo to New York City. Vast halls, stadiums, armouries and urban parks were turned into field hospitals. It was not the first time: during the 1918 flu epidemic that killed more people than the two World Wars combined, huge empty spaces werefilled with beds. A photograph of a field hospital in a US armytraining camp in Camp Funston, Kansas, where the 1918 virusfirstemerged, shows hundreds of ill soldiers in a grid of beds inan uncanny resemblance of what would happen a century later. Inhealth emergencies, all buildings are medicalised. Medical crises bring architecture to the foreground.Like antibiotics, modern architecture eventually created its own monsters. It produces sickness, most obviously sick building syndrome. The airconditioning systems that architects such asLeCorbusier celebrated for isolating the inside air from the contaminated outside air turned out to be reservoirs and vectors ofdisease, circulating pathogens. The kind of architecture that wassupposed to inoculate its occupants against disease turned against them as in a sciencefiction horror film.Many of the diseases of our time obesity, diabetes, manyformsofcancer, autoimmune disorders, allergies are nowunderstood to be plausibly connected to the diminishing diversity of bacteria. Buildings have their own microbiomes, and the diversity of these microbiomes is just as important in buildings as they are in human bodies. The bacteria of buildings continuously enter the body and the bacteria in the body are spread out across buildings along with the bacteria of fellow humans, other animals, insects and plants.Models of health paradoxically produce vulnerabilities toillnessAll these archaeological layers of sick architecture are inherently political. Models of health paradoxically produce vulnerabilities toillness. They privilege and shelter a normalised subject from threatening others. The violent exercise of colonial power, whether external or internal, is inseparable from the architecture of health. The ancient emergency strategy of the cordon sanitaire, used to isolate territories during the centuries of plague epidemics, for example, was turned into an instrument of permanent urban planning in the Belgian Congo to separate the Indigenous city fromthe European city in the name of preventing yellow fever, as suggested in the research of the artist Sammy Baloji. A 400mwide band, the distance it was thought no mosquito could fly, divided Black citizens from white settlers. The mosquito dimensioned the city. But the medical border acted as a mechanism of racialisation. In fact, all borders, whether of a room or a nation, are medical borders reinforced by countless protocols and policing. These borders are typically not a single line but a nesting of lines at multiple scales, each with its own architecture.The construction of the Panama Canal, which was first and foremost the conquest of the mosquito, involved hugescale interventions like clearing forests and draining swamps. Thearchitecture of health is always multiscalar, traversing and definingterritory, nation, ethnicity, race, class and domesticities. Itcreates models of normality, which are also models of exclusion, disadvantage and prejudice.Health is not just physical. Already in ancient Greece, a variety ofmental illnesses were identified and spatialised, as sufferers were forced to remain indoors or roam the outdoors without a permanent address. Eventually specialised buildings offered both isolation and care. Thepreeminent philosopher and physician in the Muslim world IbnSina, also known in the west as Avicenna, worked in the first mental health hospital set up in Baghdad in the 8th century to treat the head sick with calming gardens and fountains, in buildings located in the heart of the city to encourage visitors. His Canon of Medicine considered psychology to be very important and was the most influential medical text in Europe up to the 17th century. TheHospital dels Innocents, founded in Valencia, Spain, in 1410, after observing the Islamic institutions that housed the insane, isconsidered the first psychiatric hospital in the western world. Eventually the whole architecture of mental illness was undone by the antipsychiatry movement in the 1960s, but the experimentation continues today in architectures that allow those on an expanded mental spectrum to be at once sheltered and engaged in city life. Inthe Caritas psychiatric centre in Belgium (AR September 2018), designed by de Vylder Vinck Taillieu with BAVO, neurodivergence isnot treated as an illness and the role of the building is not to isolate but provide a platform.Rather than surfaces that are easy to disinfect, championed by many modernist buildings, probiotic tiles designed by Richard Beckett and Aileen Hoenerloh harbour bacteria. Made of concrete and soil, containing millions of microbes, the textured surfaces encourage the growth of a diverse microbiomeCredit:Richard Beckett and AiIleen HoenerlohDesigned for an ecologist, the shower of the Casa Jardn by Al Borde in Quito, Ecuador, is located in a greenhouse, among the plantsCredit:JAG StudioIn fact, the question of mental health has always been part of architectural discourse. Architects act as if their designs will produce a sense of wellbeing. Each mental condition needs to be countered by architecture. At the turn of the 20th century in Vienna, Camillo Sitte diagnosed the modern city as producing agoraphobia, in the very moment and place the Vienna of Freud the disorder was being actively discussed. Sitte presented his urban design, inspired by the eccentric narrow streets and small piazzas of medieval cities, as a psychological counter. In the late 1940s and 50s, Richard Neutra presented himself as a shrink to his clients, which he understood to be his patients. Likewise, when the concept of stress was identified in the 1960s as the predominant reaction tomodern life, experimental architects such as CoopHimmelblau worked with psychiatrists to produce prototypes of relaxation architectures, as discussed by Victoria Bugge ye. Hans Hollein replaced buildings altogether with an architecture pill providing the desired mental state. In reverse, some conditions such as autism are now seen as inherently spatial, and imply an alternative architecture in its own right. In addition to architectures for an expanded mental spectrum, there is the need to embrace an expanded understanding of the physical spectrum. The diverse abilities of children, older people, those with limb differences, deafness, blindness, and people who arechronically ill call for greater hospitality, opportunity and pleasure from architecture, redefining the very concept of care and transforming the role of buildings in a way that impacts many more than those being treated. Using the language of their time, Aino and Alvar Aalto offered a crucial paradigm shift when they argued that architects should always design for the person in the weakest position. The radicality of thisis to rethink architecture from vulnerability itself.The age of antibiotics and antibiotic architecture threatens our species. The microbiologist Martin Blaser writes about the silent extinction of microbes, arguing that the crisis of the diminishing diversity of the human microbiome is a bigger threat to the species than climate change. So what would a probiotic architecture be? Probably it would be like our gut: more porous, versus the prophylactic attitude of modern architecture. The immune system does not simply keep foreign organisms out; it regulates a dynamic balance between insiders and outsiders. Architecture too could be away of bringing the other in. This might mean experimenting with the idea of rewilding the interior. We used to live intimately with all the bacteria of the soil, the plants and other animals. And we may want to reconnect with even embrace this diversity of bacteria.In the UK, NHS providers produce around 156,000 tonnes of clinical waste every year. This rocketed during the height of the Covid-19 pandemic, with the explosion of single-use plastic PPE (personal protective equipment). The photographs of Natasha Durlachers Postcards from the Pandemic depict discarded masks and gloves, a solemn reminder of the devastating impact of growing ocean and landpollutionCredit:Natasha DurlacherThere is a precedent for a probiotic architecture one that fosterstransspecies communities in some of the work of the ItalianBrazilian architect Lina Bo Bardi. When she designed her Casa de Vidro in So Paulo in 1949, a house suspended in the forest, like a treehouse, she drew every insect, plant and animal living in the site with the same precision that she drew the building. For her they are part of the building. If architecture is all about keeping the bugs out, Bo Bardi embraces a transspecies architecture where insects are not the enemy, but intelligent members of the community, and humans are just temporary guests. She made exhibitions and plays for children about this new understanding of community, imagining spaces in which insects, animals and plants are the real occupants. For Bo Bardi, architecture is architecture only inasmuch as it is dissolved by other species. Even her dramatic demonstrations of geometry and force, like the remarkable MASP, were originally drawn as if being eaten by plants. This is part of a political ethic ofcelebrating and learning from other species.Architecture today needs to be dramatically reconfigured onhealth grounds just as modern architecture polemically reconfigured the 19thcentury architectures that preceded it. Humancentred design sounds good, but it is terrible for humans, aswell as other species and the planet. The first form of life was bacteria, four billion years ago, while the human is a very recent arrival and might already be on the way out. Bacteria are what madeplants, trees and eventually humans possible. The human isnot just one thing but an endlessly complex, everchanging transspecies collaboration: the human is a bag of bacteria. But bacteria are usually treated as an invisible enemy that needs to be exterminated. Instead, bacteria should be at the centre of design. We are nothing without all these foreigners. We live in them more than they live in us.This is the Keynote essay from AR April 2025: Health. Buy your copy at the ARs online shop, or read more from the issue here
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  • iOS 18.4Update Now Warning Issued To All iPhone Users
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    Apple's iOS 18.4 update also comes with a warning to update now, because it fixes a hefty list of 60 ... More security vulnerabilities, some of which are serious.Apple iPhoneUpdate, April. 02, 2025: This story, originally published Mar. 31, now includes additional expert analysis on the flaws fixed iOS 18.4, information about bug fixes and details about the other updates issued by Apple.Apple has issued iOS 18.4, along with a number of cool new iPhone features. But the iOS 18.4 update also comes with a warning to update now, because it fixes a hefty list of 62 security vulnerabilities, some of which are serious.Apple doesnt give much detail about whats fixed in iOS 18.4, to give people as much time to update their iPhones as possible before attackers can get hold of the details. Among the fixes, the iOS 18.4 upgrade patches several critical bugs in WebKit, the engine that underpins the Safari browser and the Kernel at the heart of the iPhone operating system.Apples iOS 18.4 patches an issue in the iPhone Kernel tracked as tracked as CVE-2025-30432, that could see a malicious app able to attempt passcode entries on a locked device and cause escalating time delays after four failures.Tracked as CVE-2025-24208, a bug in WebKit could put you at risk from a cross site scripting where an attacker injects malicious scripts into a trusted website if you inadvertentlysupport page.The iOS 18.4 patches come less than a month after Apples emergency iPhone update 18.3.2, which fixed a flaw already being used in real-life attacks.Breaking Down The Bugs Squashed In iOS 18.4A significant number of the vulnerabilities fixed in iOS 18.4 were in WebKit. This shows that attackers continue to focus on exploiting the framework that downloads and presents web-based content, says Adam Boynton, senior security strategy manager EMEIA at Jamf.Another key iOS 18.4 fix is in the Kernel, which is crucial because it manages all operating system operations and hardware interactions on your iPhone, says Boynton. He points out that the bug fixed in iOS 18.4 is worrying, because it allows an attacker to attempt passcode entries despite the device being locked.The iOS 18.4 update also addresses vulnerabilities in Apples Core Media. This framework is commonly used to process media, supporting a broad set of apps and managing data queues in memory, says Boynton. By targeting these vulnerabilities, attackers can corrupt process memory and access sensitive information, he warns.Thankfully, there appear to be no publicly exploited vulnerabilities fixed in iOS 18.4, says Sean Wright, head of application security at Featurespace. While there are quite a few fixes, it is good to see them being addressed, he says.Some people might be alarmed by the number of security fixes being issued by Apple in recent times. However, Wright says this is a good thing. Vulnerabilities are part of software, the important part is that they are addressed in a timely manner. I think Apple has done a respectable job, he says.Wright does point out that some of the vulnerabilities patched in iOS 18.4 could impact a user when chained together. However, he says, these would have to be used in very targeted attacks.While Apple hasnt mentioned any instances of these vulnerabilities being exploited in real attacks, the CVEs are now public, Boynton says. Attackers will likely target devices that have yet to be updated, so downloading iOS 18.4 is essential for all users.Researcher Issues Warning About A New Setting Enabled By Default In iOS 18.4Shortly after the release of iOS 18.4, a security researcher noticed a new iPhone setting had been enabled by default.Apples iOS 18.4 introduced a new option in System Location Services called Improve Location Accuracy and it is enabled by default, security researcher Tommy Mysk wrote on X, formerly Twitter.You can find it under: Settings > Privacy & Security > Location Services > System Services.This option appears to enhance the Assisted GPS (aGPS) network by providing more precise GPS coordinates of nearby Wi-Fi networks and cell towers, Mysk wrote. Apple and Google devices rely on the aGPS database in areas where the GPS signal is weak.The iOS 18.4 feature isnt on for all users, but it makes sense to check your iPhone to see if yours is.Meanwhile, it is being reported that Apple Intelligence is enabled by default yet again in iOS 18.4. In both cases, once youve downloaded iOS 18.4, its a good idea to go to your settings and ensure these features are turned off, if you dont want to use them.To turn off Apple Intelligence now, go to Settings > Apple Intelligence and Siri and toggle off Apple Intelligence.Bug Fixes In iOS 18.4The iOS 18.4 update also comes with some fixes for annoying iPhone bugs. According to the iOS 18.4 release notes, these include several issues with Apple Intelligence.Another resolved issue is a problem where scrolling through Notifications might cause them to flicker or collapse momentarily. Meanwhile issues resolved in Apples voice assistant Siri include a problem where in non-English languages, some Siri suggestions might fail to complete successfully.Apple Issues iPadOS 17.7.6, iOS 16.7.11 And iOS 15.8.4Alongside iOS 18.4, Apple has issued iPadOS 17.7.6 for older devices the iPad Pro 12.9-inch 2nd generation, iPad Pro 10.5-inch, and iPad 6th generation. The update fixes a number of flaws, the most notable being an issue in CoreMedia that could allow a malicious application to elevate privileges, tracked as CVE-2025-24085. Apple is aware of a report that this issue may have been actively exploited against versions of iOS before iOS 17.2, the iPhone maker warns.Meanwhile, iOS 16.7.11 for the iPhone 8, iPhone 8 Plus, iPhone X, iPad 5th generation, iPad Pro 9.7-inch, and iPad Pro 12.9-inch 1st generation fixes two issues used in real life attacks.Lastly, Apple has squashed the same bugs for very old devices in iOS 15.8.4.Other Updates Released By AppleAlongside iOS 18.4 and the updates for older iPhones and iPads, Apple released Safari 18.4 for macOS Ventura and macOS Sonoma, Xcode 16.3 for macOS Sequoia 15.2 and later, macOS Sequoia 15.4, macOS Sonoma 14.7.5, and macOS Ventura 13.7.5. It also issued tvOS 18.4 and visionOS 2.4 for its mixed reality headset.Why You Should Update To iOS 18.4 NowApples iOS 18.4 fixes more than 60 issues one of the biggest list of patches Ive seen from the iPhone maker in recent times. With such a high number of security fixes, we strongly recommend that users update their devices to iOS 18.4, says Boynton.Indeed, iOS 18.4 and the other upgrades issued alongside it include important security updates for your iPhone some of which have been used in real-life attacks. These vulnerabilities could potentially allow malicious code to run on affected devices, putting data at risk as well as the device itself at risk of a remote denial of service attack, says Jake Moore, global cybersecurity advisor at ESET.He recommends all users install the iOS 18.4 update as soon as possible to ensure devices remain protected against these known threats.I agree. Apples iOS 18.4 includes a long list of patched flaws, so its a good idea to apply it now. Go to your Settings > General > Software Update and download and install iOS 18.4 now to keep your iPhone safe.
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