Artist Romero Britto buys headquarters building in Miami for $12 million Internationally acclaimed artist Romero Britto acquired the site of his headquarters warehouse/studio in Miami-Dade County for $11.8 million. 09/24/2024 - 7:10 am | View Link
Warehouse near Miami airport sold for $24 million The Airport East Business Center warehouse complex in Hialeah sold for $24 million. 09/24/2024 - 3:00 am | View Link
They moved back a decade ago. Now they’re struggling amid Haiti’s economic collapse Ten years ago, Boursiquot and his wife Marguerite Baril-Boursiquot, both Haitian, did what many in the country’s burgeoning diaspora long dreamed of: They permanently moved back to Haiti. 09/21/2024 - 2:25 am | View Link
Canada Goose to get into eyewear through deal with Marchon Canada Goose Holdings Inc. says it has signed a deal that will result in the creation of its first eyewear collection. 09/19/2024 - 5:28 am | View Link
A journey from NC to Ukraine to suspect in apparent assassination attempt Months before he allegedly pointed a semiautomatic rifle into a Florida golf course as former President Donald Trump approached, Ryan Routh described himself as a failure. 09/18/2024 - 10:30 pm | View Link
A class-action lawsuit that dates to the opening weeks of Encore Boston Harbor’s operations that argued the casino’s games shortchanged customers has been dismissed.
“We want these companies to graduate from the cohort with more confidence, intelligence and a new network of colleagues and a strong sense of resourcefulness that will serve them through the life of their business.”
Sony's <em>Ghost of Yotei</em> trailer.
If you've been sleeping on the Akira Kurosawa-inspired, Assassin's Creed-esque samurai game Ghost of Tsushima, you've been missing out. Given that it recently got a PC release, this is a great time to catch up on it—but now there's even more reason to do so, as Sony just announced a sequel titled Ghost of Yōtei.
Slated for a 2025 release, the game bears similarities to its predecessor.
Enlarge (credit: Getty Images)
When security researcher Johann Rehberger recently reported a vulnerability in ChatGPT that allowed attackers to store false information and malicious instructions in a user’s long-term memory settings, OpenAI summarily closed the inquiry, labeling the flaw a safety issue, not, technically speaking, a security concern.
So Rehberger did what all good researchers do: He created a proof-of-concept exploit that used the vulnerability to exfiltrate all user input in perpetuity.