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The first ever Android device to score over 1600 points The first ever Android device to score over 1600 points

Software

The first ever Android device to score over 1600 points in Geekbench 5. The record was set by the Samsung Galaxy S23 Ultra

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The author of the YouTube channel Golden Reviewer, which tests and compares smartphones among themselves, has published a record result of the Samsung Galaxy S23 Ultra in the popular test application Geekbench 5.

So, this is the first Android device in history to break 1600 points in Geekbench 5 single-threaded mode.

Golden Reviewer

The first ever Android device to score over 1600 points in Geekbench 5. The record was set by the Samsung Galaxy S23 Ultra

The test was conducted just yesterday, and the test result when using all the cores of the Qualcommm Snapdragon 8 Gen 2 single-chip system was 5311 points.

Recall that the Galaxy S23 Ultra is equipped with an overclocked version of the Qualcomm Snapdragon 8 Gen 2 single-chip system, specially tuned by Samsung for its flagship. The processor frequency of this platform has been increased to 3.36 GHz.

In early February, a well-known insider under the nickname Ice Universe published on Weibo the results of testing the Samsung Galaxy S23 Ultra in Geekbench 5, which amounted to 1573 points.

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Software

Elon Musk announced the availability of Twitter Blue around the world: what does a paid subscription give

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Elon Musk announced the availability of Twitter Blue around the

Paid verification of accounts on the social network Twitter, which is given using a subscription called Twitter Blue, has become available to users around the world.

This was announced by the head of Twitter, American billionaire Elon Musk, who also heads Tesla, SpaceX, The Boring Company and Neuralink.

A Twitter Blue subscription allows users of the social network to receive a blue check mark in their accounts, which indicates the authenticity of their accounts. You can subscribe for a price of $ 7 per month, which was confirmed by Elon Musk himself.

Elon Musk announced the availability of Twitter Blue around the world: what does a paid subscription give

Sign up today to get blue tick, conversation priority ranking, half ads, long tweets, bookmark folders, custom navigation, tweet editing, untweeting and more.

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Software

Employees of Apple and Twitter are driven to the offices. You can get fired for working from home

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Employees of Apple and Twitter are driven to the offices

Zoe Schiffer, who was recently managing editor of Twitter and now holds the same position at Platformer, said that Apple strictly monitors how employees visit offices.

Apple tracks employee attendance (using electronic badge records) and alerts employees if they don’t show up to the office at least 3 times a week.

Zoe Schiffer

Some at Apple, according to Schiffer, say that non-compliance could lead to dismissal, but she added that this does not seem like company policy.

Employees of Apple and Twitter are driven to the offices.  You can get fired for working from home

Photo: Midjourney

In addition, she revealed that her former boss, Elon Musk, sent an email to Twitter employees at 2:30 a.m. stating that “office visits are no longer optional.” The billionaire noticed that the San Francisco office was half empty when he last visited.

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Security

Scissors undercut: Windows 11 vulnerability reveals sensitive information from screenshots, including deleted parts

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Scissors undercut Windows 11 vulnerability reveals sensitive information from screenshots

A dangerous vulnerability has been discovered in one of the standard Windows 11 applications that could lead to the disclosure of sensitive information to the user. Moreover, at the moment the vulnerability is not closed and attackers can use it.

Scissors undercut: Windows 11 vulnerability reveals sensitive information from screenshots, including deleted parts

Generated by the Midjourney neural network

We are talking about the application Snipping Tool (Scissors). The vulnerability, called aCropalypse, allows you to undo changes made by a user when editing a screenshot, including cropped or blurred parts that hide sensitive data.

When you edit a screenshot, you can save it with the same name as the original file by overwriting it. However, as it turns out, the Windows 11 Snipping Tool does not remove the original information from the file, but simply leaves it added at the end, which is usually invisible to users. With some trickery, a potential attacker can extract hidden information from a file and see what information has been edited.

As you can see, edited screenshots are usually much larger due to the inclusion of information from the original image.

Scissors undercut: Windows 11 vulnerability reveals sensitive information from screenshots, including deleted parts

This is a pretty serious vulnerability. For example, if you share a screenshot of an order confirmation page on Amazon, it may contain an address, the same goes for credit card numbers and other sensitive data.

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