Monday, August 14, 2017

Access codes for United cockpit doors accidentally posted online and other top stories.

  • Access codes for United cockpit doors accidentally posted online

    Access codes for United cockpit doors accidentally posted online
    United Continental Holdings alerted pilots that access codes to cockpit doors were accidentally posted on a public website by a flight attendant, reports the Wall Street Journal. The company, which owns United Airlines and United Express, asked pilots to follow security procedures already in use, including visually confirming someone’s identity before they are allowed onto the flight deck even if they enter the correct security code into the cockpit door’s keypad. The Air Line Pilots Associati..
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  • Lyft and Waymo in DriverlessTeam-Up -- WSJ

    Lyft and Waymo in DriverlessTeam-Up -- WSJ
    Ride-hailing startup Lyft Inc. and Waymo LLC, the driverless-car division of Google parent Alphabet Inc., said they would work together to develop autonomous-vehicle technology, dealing another potential blow to rival Uber Technologies Inc.'s ambitions. The two companies said Sunday they will collaborate on developing products and technology for autonomous autos. In statements, they declined to elaborate more specifically on the terms of the deal or what the work would entail. A person famili..
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  • Baby on Board badge not just for cars in New York

    Baby on Board badge not just for cars in New York
    Story highlightsNew York begins a "Baby on Board" button program for pregnant subway ridersThere's also a "Please Offer Me a Seat" button, which can be worn by seniors or customers with disabilitiesThe MTA has begun issuing blue and yellow "Baby on Board" buttons as part of the agency's Courtesy Counts campaign to encourage strap-hangers to be polite to their fellow riders. The pilot program begins on Mother's Day and runs through Labor Day. Customers who are pregnant can choose from a "Baby on..
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  • Worldwide cyberattack could spark more trouble

    Worldwide cyberattack could spark more trouble
    Companies worldwide are bracing for even more fallout from the biggest cyberattack ever as their workers head back to the office Monday. The massive ransomware attacks that started late Friday have locked people out of their computers and demanded hundreds of dollars from the users before they could regain control. The attacks exploit a vulnerability in outdated versions of Microsoft Windows that is particularly problematic for corporations that don't automatically update their systems. ..
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  • Oil jumps as Saudi, Russia take lead and extend supply cuts to March 2018

    Oil jumps as Saudi, Russia take lead and extend supply cuts to March 2018
    SINGAPORE Oil prices jumped 2 percent on Monday after the energy ministers of the world's two biggest producers Saudi Arabia and Russia jointly said that a crude production cut would be extended from the middle of this year until March 2018.Brent crude was at $51.88 per barrel at 0655 GMT, up $1.04, or 2.1 percent, from its last close at a level last seen in early May.U.S. West Texas Intermediate (WTI) crude was at $48.85 per barrel, up $1.01, or 2.1 percent.Saudi Energy Minister Khalid al-Fal..
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  • Augmenting Snap's Financial Reality

    Augmenting Snap's Financial Reality
    Augmenting Snap's Financial Reality Snapchat's user growth is slowing. Prepare for the deluxe ads by May 15, 2017, 3:00 AM EDT Source: Snap Inc.On Cinco de Mayo, millions of Snapchat users willingly turned their selfies into an ad for Taco Bell. The app’s augmented-reality camera filter, known on the service as a Lens, let them see their heads in the shape of a giant, wobbling hardshell taco, with lettuce and tomato poking out and the fast-food chain’s logo in the corner of the shot. I..
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  • Asian shares gain, shrug off cyberattack, NK missile launch

    Asian shares gain, shrug off cyberattack, NK missile launch
    TOKYO (AP) — Shares were higher in early trading Monday in Asia, despite worries of disruptions from the "WannaCry" ransomware cyberattack over the weekend. Yet another missile launch by North Korea also appeared to have little impact, while upbeat talk on trade and infrastructure investment at a top-level conference in China brightened sentiment.KEEPING SCORE: Japan's Nikkei 225 stock index slipped 0.2 percent to 19,842.15, falling back after early gains. Hong Kong's Hang Seng index added 25..
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  • Family says JetBlue booted them from flight over a birthday cake

    Family says JetBlue booted them from flight over a birthday cake
    A family en route to a birthday celebration in Las Vegas this month said they were booted from a JetBlue flight over where to store a cake they had brought on board รข€” even after, they said, they complied with instructions to move the cake to the floor.The airline confirmed the incident occurred May 3 aboard JetBlue Flight 611 before takeoff from New York's John F. Kennedy International Airport. However, it is disputing the passengers' account, saying their removal was justified because their ..
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  • China's economy slows in April in 'turning point'

    China's economy slows in April in 'turning point'
    BEIJING--China's economic activity weakened more than expected last month on flagging factory demand, part of an anticipated gradual slowdown in the world's second-largest economy for the rest of 2017. Value-added industrial output, a rough proxy for economic growth, rose by 6.5% in April from a year earlier, the National Bureau of Statistics said Monday. The number was more than a percentage point under March's rise and well below what many economists had predicted. Fixed-asset investment, mon..
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  • Some businesses in Asia disrupted by cyber attack, authorities brace for more

    Some businesses in Asia disrupted by cyber attack, authorities brace for more
    Hooded an holds laptop computer as cyber code is projected on him in this illustration picture Thomson Reuters By Jeremy Wagstaff and Dustin Volz SINGAPORE/WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Asian governments and businesses reported some disruptions from the WannaCry ransomware worm on Monday but cybersecurity experts warned of a wider impact as more employees turned on their computers and checked e-mails. The ransomware that has locked up more than 200,000 computers in more th..
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