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Tuesday Dec 4 - St. Barbara




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Tuesday Dec 11 - The Venerable Luke the Stylite




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Tuesday Dec 18 - The Holy Martyr Sebastian and Those With Him




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Tuesday Dec 25 - The Nativity according to the Flesh of our Lord, God and Savior Jesus Christ




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The Virtue of Failure - Part 1

Fr. John begins a four part series on the virtue of failure by describing the inevitability and purpose of failure.




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The Virtue of Failure - Part 2

Fr. John continues his series (Part 2) by redefining failure and describing the ways that we react to our own failures.




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The Virtue of Failure - Part 3

Fr. John continues his series (Part 3) by reflecting on the goal of interior renewal.




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The Virtue of Failure - Part 4

Fr. John completes his series (Part 4) by describing how failure can become a servant of God for the renewal of our lives.




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A Necklace of Virtues

A Necklace of Virtues by Calee M. Lee, illustrated by Turbo Qualls (Xist Publishing, 2012).




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Tuesday Night Bridegroom Service—Children of Light

Fr. Ted asks whether you will choose to be a person of the light or a person of the darkness.




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On The Virtue Of Goodness




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Holy Tuesday Bridegroom Matins

Fr. Apostolos Hill shares a short homily reflecting on the Gospel theme of the second Bridegroom Matins service.




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How Do I Keep the Commandments and Acquire Virtue?




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Wealth is Not a Sin and Poverty is Not a Virtue (Luke 16:19-31)

The parable of the Lazarus and the Rich Man is a story rich with lessons about life and about death. Fr Thomas focuses on the implications of living with unprecedented wealth in our modern society.




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Holy Tuesday




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Holy Tuesday - Five Wise and Five Foolish




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Bright Tuesday - REJOICE!




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Holy Tuesday - Five Wise and Five Foolish




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Bright Tuesday - REJOICE!




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St. John the Dwarf: A Life of All the Virtues

What has a man whose obedience once caused a barren stick to blossom forth a tree in the desert to tell us today about the life of virtue? Is it possible for man today to partake of all the virtues? In this week’s broadcast, Fr. Matthew examines two sayings of Fr. John the Short of Egypt on the accessibility of all the virtues through the foundation of the love of neighbor.




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St. John the Dwarf: A Life of All the Virtues

What has a man whose obedience once caused a barren stick to blossom forth a tree in the desert to tell us today about the life of virtue? Is it possible for man today to partake of all the virtues? In this week’s broadcast, Archimandrite Irenei examines two sayings of Fr. John the Short of Egypt on the accessibility of all the virtues through the foundation of the love of neighbor.




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Tuesday headlines: bento books and zebra striping

The White House sides with Israel's ground assault of Lebanon while much of the world calls for a ceasefire. / Al Jazeera

Meanwhile, Iran is said to be preparing to launch a ballistic-missile attack. / The Wall Street Journal [+]

A long profile of Ta-Nehisi Coates, whose new book criticizes Israel and the corrupting influence of power. "I'm sad, but I was so enraged." / New York Magazine

Things to watch for in tonight's Vance-Walz debate. / Wake Up to Politics

Helene slamming a small town in North Carolina may disrupt the global supply chain for microchips. / NPR

A nuclear plant in Michigan will be the first in US history to restart. / CNBC

Your weekly white paper: "A systematic review about similarities in dog-human dyads." / Science Direct

A fascinating survey of how religious believers are using new technologies in their daily practices. / rest of world

An audio dive into Google's new niche product Notebook, which can turn a bunch of PDFs into a convincing podcast. / The New York Times [+]

See also: Barry C. Lynn on "Liberal democracy's last stand against Big Tech." / Harper's

From July, have you seen the trend of new books using multi-panel illustrations on their covers? They're called "bento books." / I Need a Book Cover

A celebrated new short story collection is about "people who just can't hang." / The New Yorker

Also, have you noticed worse service at restaurants lately? For the sake of society, that might be a good thing. / Economist Writing Every Day

See also: Britain experiences a rise in "zebra striping," where pub patrons alternate between alcoholic and non-alcoholic beer. / Semafor

Japan's smaller museums are praised for their elegance. / The Wall Street Journal [+]

Photographs of Japanese forests shimmering with fireflies. / Colossal

View Post →




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Tuesday headlines: Uni tunes

Hurricane Milton, headed for Tampa, becomes the second-fastest storm to reach Category 5 status. / Vox

John Morales: The proportion of tropical cyclones that reach very intense levels is projected to increase. / The Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists

Representative Marjorie Taylor Greene tells her followers that the government controls the weather. / Grist

Unrelated: Ancient monsters from indigenous folklore. / Atlas Obscura

Britain opened the world's first coal-fired power station in 1882. It's now the first G7 nation to phase out coal power completely. / CarbonBrief

American communities are beginning to "decommission" dams, fearful of climate impacts. / Undark Magazine

A fun online quiz about "the weird, wild, wired world of new vehicles." / rest of world

See also, from last month: "Hollywood Can't Ditch its Teslas Fast Enough." / Hollywood Reporter

California becomes the first state to ban "sell-by" dates on food. / Food & Wine

Dr. Pepper ties Pepsi as the second-best selling soda in the US. / MSN

The style of Jula Child's kitchens was "subservient to flexible functionality," helping usher in Universal Design. / Places Journal

A relaxation of rules around using apostrophes in German has "triggered existential fears." / The Guardian

Tressie McMillan Cottom explains what it was like to interview Diddy at his Malibu home. (Very weird, not good.) / The Independent

A lovely visual essay about author Jaime Lowe rediscovering her libido by learning how to dive for sea urchins. / The New York Times Magazine [+]

A brief cultural history of cocaine. "I enjoyed myself hugely." / aeon

View Post →




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Tuesday headlines: Beauty is in the eye of October

Due to some unforseen events, we missed a couple days last week. Sorry about that! All is better and we appreciate the readers who reached out.

Israel reportedly says any attacks on Iran will target its military, not nuclear or oil facilities. / CNN

Republican campaigns spend more money at Shake Shack and Jimmy John's while Democrats eat at Sweetgreen and Le Pain Quotidien. / The Washington Post [+]

People whose homes were damaged by recent storms are likely to be forced to "build up or move out." / Heatmap

Related: Emergency workers in North Carolina were withdrawn for fear of trucks of armed militia "saying they were out hunting FEMA." The local sherriff's office says otherwise. / The Guardian, Citizen Times

Nepalese teenager Nima Rinji Sherpa breaks the record for the youngest mountaineer to summit Earth's 14 highest peaks. / BBC News

A team finds the remains of one of the first climbers to attempt Mount Everest. / National Geographic

Prior to the 20th century, oyster reefs covered more than 1.7 million hectares across European oceans. / Bloomberg [+]

Do more people die from heat or cold? Cold, but most die from "moderate cold." / Sustainability by numbers

The amount of tents on the streets of San Franicsco is down 60% since July 2023. / The San Francisco Standard

New Yorkers deploy "anti-influencer architecture" in neighborhoods popular with TikTokers. / Curbed

See also: A nonprofit called Mothers Against Media Addiction aims to follow the model of Mothers Against Drunk Driving. / The Information

Fitness bros on TikTok participating in "locktober" may not know the term's history as a chastity kink. / Them

Author Rumaan Alan's solution for his midlife crisis is to get tattooed with things he doesn't want to forget. / Esquire

An argument for skipping wellness and personal development for "wasteful intervals of pure, delicious nothingness." / The Good Question

View Post →




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Tuesday headlines: A wood man is hard to find

Russia has suffered catastrophic losses during its invasion of Ukraine, but its policies suggest the end justifies the means. / The Guardian

Mara Karlin: An era of limited war has ended; an age of comprehensive conflict has begun. / Foreign Affairs

A new rideshare company in South Africa is reportedly using intimidation to coerce drivers and passengers. / rest of world

In the past two years, Donald Trump has called for every major American TV news network to be punished. / Reliable Sources

An ethicist says making presidents and candidates share their medical history is a bad idea. / STAT

Street psychiatrists in Los Angeles offer a solution for mentally ill people—basically, "DoorDash for meds." / The New York Times [+]

Related: Observations from an hour spent last week in an LA coffeeshop. / Meditations in an Emergency

The WNBA players union opts out of its collective bargaining agreement, two years before its expiration. / The Associated Press

Unrelated: Multiply the number two by itself 136,279,841 times, minus one, and you get the new largest known prime number. / The Great Internet Mersenne Prime Search

The late-in-life partner of Oliver Sacks movingly recalls the neurologist's search to build a cohesive life. / The New York Times [+]

Anthony Bourdain's french fries recipe. "If you don't blanch your fries first, you'll get a scandalously bad result." / The Melt

See also: Remembering Ka, the "quiet sage" of underground rap (and firefighter). / Pitchfork

"A group of woodcocks is a fall. A flock of seagulls is annoying." Some ruminations on words connected to wood. / Harper's

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Tuesday headlines: Radio on the TV

Saudi Arabia and Iran conducted a joint military drill last week in the Sea of Oman. / TRT World

A good summary of current conflicts in the Middle East from Spencer Ackerman. / Forever Wars

Oren Yiftachel: "Apartheid is not only a moral abyss and a crime against humanity; it is also an unstable regime." / +972 Magazine

President Biden waits in line for 40 minutes to cast his vote in the election. / The Associated Press

Philadelphia's District Attorney sues Elon Musk over his million-dollar sweepstakes for voters in battleground states. / Deadline

Unrelated: SpaceX wins a new round of military contracts worth $733 million. / Ars Technica

The term "clippers" refers to people influencing the political news cycle by making snappy videos for social media. / CNN

Related: A brief online test to check your susceptibility to misinformation. / University of Cambridge

A deep dive into how Chinese firms are evading US controls on advanced technologies. / Semianalysis

Collectors spent roughly a third less on art in 2023 than in 2022, with the largest decrease in spending at the highest levels. / Artsy

A book review connects recent novels about women's midlife crises to older stories about witches. / The New Yorker

United Airlines prints its final in-flight magazine, the last connected to a major US carrier. / Columbia Journalism Review

See also: A short film about the States' last fabric flower factory. / YouTube

Analysis of baseball's minor leagues finds persistent bias against Black and Latino players dating back to 1950. / The Guardian

An argument for enjoying the World Series aurally: "Listening to baseball on the radio requires a patience—and provides a catharsis." / GQ

Confessions of a Spotify vandal. / Hearing Things

Some thoughts on what exactly is human spirit. "Our energies often come from a combination of neurotic drive and positive response." / Lapham's Quarterly

View Post →




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Tuesday headlines: Kiss or cut bait

Ukrainian officials say North Korean soldiers deployed to fight alongside Moscow's troops came under fire. / The Kyiv Independent

A fascinating story about an Israeli college student who wound up in a prisoner swap because of her Instagram stories. / The New York Times [+]

The United States is spending an estimated $1.7 trillion to advance its nuclear arsenal. / Undark Magazine

See also: A pair of physicists and an animator have created a new way to visualize the atomic nucleus. / Kottke

A guide to poll closing times, vote counting, and races to watch in US elections. / 538

A layman's guide to being a political junkie today. "Do not—under any circumstances—turn on a TV prior to 6pm." / Matt's Five Points

Something we didn't know: The only major social media platform with an explicit ban on phony voter fraud posts is Snap. / Platformer

New York Times reporters recently accused their editors of "sanewashing" Donald Trump. Meanwhile, the editorial board embraces "hypertextual writing." / Semafor, Kottke

Unrelated: A cruise ship medic fact-checks Ryan Murphy's new series Doctor Odyssey. / The Points Guy

A longstanding survey in Japan finds a record fall in teenagers having their first kiss. / BBC News

"Longevity concierges" are said to be trending in Silicon Valley. / The San Francisco Standard

Half a dozen innovative products—a solar cow, a trash can that sterilizes itself—from Seoul Design 2024. / dezeen

Making the argument that a muralist in Sussex, England, was a bit of a 12th-century Ai Weiwei. / Keith McGowan

An aerial depiction of the (maybe someday) Los Angeles-San Francisco high speed rail route. / YouTube

Some examples of "camera trap photography" in Southern California. / My Modern Met

Related: Photographer of the week, simply because we like her work: Patricia Voulgaris. / Patricia Voulgaris

"It's always hot girl summer at Jacksonville Zoo and Garden." Museums and tourist attractions are marketing themselves to Gen Z. / artnet

View Post →




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Tuesday headlines: Serenade the sheep from the goats

Israel says there will be no ceasefire or pause until its war objectives are met. / The Times of Israel

A video round-up of what's happened in northern Gaza siege since the US gave its 30-day warning a month ago. / Al Jazeera

Between news-averse voters and Twitter disinformation, "Donald Trump was returned to power by the most badly informed electorate in modern American history." / The Philadelphia Inquirer

See also: The mirror of fascism in big tech. / Dead Simple Tech

Hannah Ritchie: The fact that researchers can't keep up with developments in low-carbon energy is, in many ways, a good thing. / Sustainability by numbers

Difficult-to-pronounce names are found to be negatively related to the probability of landing academic jobs. / American Economic Association

A scientist with breast cancer self-experimented with lab-grown viruses—and though the treatment was a success, she doesn't recommend just anyone try it. / Nature

Only 0.8% of American women live in an area that has an abortion facility that doesn't also have a nearby anti-abortion "crisis pregnancy center." / NBC News

"Spiritual bars"—alcohol plus tarot readings—are said to be booming in China. / Radii

More migratory birds passing through New York City means more skyscraper collisions. / The Guardian

Unrelated: Some thoughts about rethinking your commuting route. / The Los Angeles Times

Authorities dismantle a criminal group responsible for forging over 2,000 artworks attributed to more than 30 known artists. / artsy

A review of a $420,000 electric car says the best feature is the sound it makes. / The Verge

Watch: A short film about the custodians of an emergency airport in Australia. / Colossal

Residents of Coulsdon, England, find their Facebook posts deleted by an algorithm that flags the word "LSD" in their town's name. / Inside Croydon

Is social media an oral culture? "I actually don't know if any of this is right." / X

Baby boomers think the love song is dying—and they're wrong, but that's because the categories have changed. / The Pudding

View Post →




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Sculptor strives for fitting Monty Python statue

A fundraising drive for a Terry Jones memorial statue in Colwyn Bay nears its £100,000 target.




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Election Day is Tuesday, but winner might not be known Tuesday

"Election Day is Tuesday, Nov. 5 -- but that doesn't mean we'll know who won the election on that date. With each passing election, more and more Americans are casting mail-in ballots, which take longer to count than in-person votes because they need to be opened and verified. That means that finding out the winner on election night may be a thing of the past," advises ABC News in a brief analysis.




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IUJSOM Hot Tuesdays: Jazz Combos

Ford-Crawford Hall, Simon Music Center
Tuesday, November 12, 2024, 8:30 – 10pm

More infoevents.iu.edu…



  • 2024/11/12 (Tue)

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Rain tapers off Monday with another round coming Tuesday

A cold front marching through the region pushes scattered showers and a few thunderstorms eastward across Wisconsin through Monday morning and into the afternoon. Rain chances return from the south overnight and spill into a wet Tuesday.




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More sunshine Tuesday ahead of rain developing Wednesday

We’ll have another day of cool sunshine Tuesday. The next system will develop rain showers for Wednesday. Temperatures will be warming up by Friday and Saturday. 




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In Newmarket, Calls To Put Up Statue Of Black Revolutionary War Hero

With statues coming down around the country in the wake of the Black Lives Matter movement, NHPR’s Sean Hurley recently heard about one town in New Hampshire that is considering putting one up.




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Overcast Skies, Showers Forecast through Tuesday

[Science] :
Overcast skies are forecast nationwide Monday, with showers expected in the south of the country and parts of the central region. According to the Korea Meteorological Administration, overcast conditions and rain are to continue Tuesday. The southernmost island of Jeju is expected to see about 120 ...

[more...]




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Temperatures in Central Region to Drop to 5°C Tuesday Morning

[Science] :
Temperatures in the country’s central region are expected to drop drastically starting Monday afternoon, and weather forecasters may issue a cold wave advisory for Tuesday. According to the Korea Meteorological Administration, mercury levels nationwide ranged between seven and 16 degrees Celsius on Monday ...

[more...]




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Cold Weather Forecast for Tuesday

[Science] :
Tuesday is set to see cold weather as temperatures drop sharply with strong, cold winds blowing from Monday.  The Korea Meteorological Administration forecast that morning lows will stand between two and eleven degrees Celsius on Tuesday, down seven to 13 degrees from Monday.  Afternoon highs will be ...

[more...]




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KOSPI Down 1.94% on Tuesday

[Economy] :
The benchmark Korea Composite Stock Price Index dipped 49-point-09 points, or one-point-94 percent, on Tuesday to close at two-thousand-482-point-57. The tech-heavy KOSDAQ slid 18-point-32 points, or two-point-51 percent, to close at 710-point-52.

[more...]




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Erin E. Virtue has been Inducted into the Prestigious Marquis Who's Who Biographical Registry

Erin E. Virtue celebrates a career of achievements and contributions to volleyball




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Pacific Marine Expo to be held Tuesday, Dec. 1 through Thursday, Dec. 3, at CenturyLink Field Event Center in Seattle

Pacific Marine Expo, the West Coast's largest commercial fishing and marine industry trade show, returns to Seattle Dec. 1 - 3. The Expo serves commercial vessel owners and operators, commercial fishermen, boat builders and seafood processors.




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Amy Peterburs Stuebs has been Inducted into the Prestigious Marquis Who's Who Biographical Registry

Amy Peterburs Stuebs is recognized for small business leadership and expertise in the hospitality and food service industry




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A Treasure Map, a Vampire Statue and Paul Newman's Toothbrush Have All Been Left in Wills According to a New Survey from Estatesearch

New research study of 2,000 Canadian residents reveals quirky items left in Wills




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WCIRB Actuarial Committee Meets Tuesday

The Workers’ Compensation Insurance Rating Bureau of California’s Actuarial Committee will review insurer experience reports during a meeting Tuesday. Committee members will discuss the report evaluating insurer experience as of June 30,…




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Microsoft’s November 2024 Patch Tuesday Addresses 87 CVEs (CVE-2024-43451, CVE-2024-49039)

  1. 4Critical
  2. 82Important
  3. 1Moderate
  4. 0Low

Microsoft addresses 87 CVEs and one advisory (ADV240001) in its November 2024 Patch Tuesday release, with four critical vulnerabilities and four zero-day vulnerabilities, including two that were exploited in the wild.

Microsoft patched 87 CVEs in its November 2024 Patch Tuesday release, with four rated critical, 82 rated important and one rated moderate.

This month’s update includes patches for:

  • .NET and Visual Studio
  • Airlift.microsoft.com
  • Azure CycleCloud
  • Azure Database for PostgreSQL
  • LightGBM
  • Microsoft Exchange Server
  • Microsoft Graphics Component
  • Microsoft Office Excel
  • Microsoft Office Word
  • Microsoft PC Manager
  • Microsoft Virtual Hard Drive
  • Microsoft Windows DNS
  • Role: Windows Hyper-V
  • SQL Server
  • TorchGeo
  • Visual Studio
  • Visual Studio Code
  • Windows Active Directory Certificate Services
  • Windows CSC Service
  • Windows DWM Core Library
  • Windows Defender Application Control (WDAC)
  • Windows Kerberos
  • Windows Kernel
  • Windows NT OS Kernel
  • Windows NTLM
  • Windows Package Library Manager
  • Windows Registry
  • Windows SMB
  • Windows SMBv3 Client/Server
  • Windows Secure Kernel Mode
  • Windows Task Scheduler
  • Windows Telephony Service
  • Windows USB Video Driver
  • Windows Update Stack
  • Windows VMSwitch
  • Windows Win32 Kernel Subsystem

Remote code execution (RCE) vulnerabilities accounted for 58.6% of the vulnerabilities patched this month, followed by elevation of privilege (EoP) vulnerabilities at 29.9%.

Important

CVE-2024-43451 | NTLM Hash Disclosure Spoofing Vulnerability

CVE-2024-43451 is a NTLM hash spoofing vulnerability in Microsoft Windows. It was assigned a CVSSv3 score of 6.5 and is rated as important. An attacker could exploit this flaw by convincing a user to open a specially crafted file. Successful exploitation would lead to the unauthorized disclosure of a user’s NTLMv2 hash, which an attacker could then use to authenticate to the system as the user. According to Microsoft, CVE-2024-43451 was exploited in the wild as a zero-day. No further details about this vulnerability were available at the time this blog post was published.

This is the second NTLM spoofing vulnerability disclosed in 2024. Microsoft patched CVE-2024-30081 in its July Patch Tuesday release.

Important

CVE-2024-49039 | Windows Task Scheduler Elevation of Privilege Vulnerability

CVE-2024-49039 is an EoP vulnerability in the Microsoft Windows Task Scheduler. It was assigned a CVSSv3 score of 8.8 and is rated as important. An attacker with local access to a vulnerable system could exploit this vulnerability by running a specially crafted application. Successful exploitation would allow an attacker to access resources that would otherwise be unavailable to them as well as execute code, such as remote procedure call (RPC) functions.

According to Microsoft, CVE-2024-49039 was exploited in the wild as a zero-day. It was disclosed to Microsoft by an anonymous researcher along with Vlad Stolyarov and Bahare Sabouri of Google's Threat Analysis Group. At the time this blog post was published, no further details about in-the-wild exploitation were available.

Important

CVE-2024-49019 | Active Directory Certificate Services Elevation of Privilege Vulnerability

CVE-2024-49019 is an EoP vulnerability affecting Active Directory Certificate Services. It was assigned a CVSSv3 score of 7.8 and is rated as important. It was publicly disclosed prior to a patch being made available. According to Microsoft, successful exploitation would allow an attacker to gain administrator privileges. The advisory notes that “certificates created using a version 1 certificate template with Source of subject name set to ‘Supplied in the request’” are potentially impacted if the template has not been secured according to best practices. This vulnerability is assessed as “Exploitation More Likely” according to Microsoft’s Exploitability Index. Microsoft’s advisory also includes several mitigation steps for securing certificate templates which we highly recommend reviewing.

Important

CVE-2024-49040 | Microsoft Exchange Server Spoofing Vulnerability

CVE-2024-49040 is a spoofing vulnerability affecting Microsoft Exchange Server 2016 and 2019. It was assigned a CVSSv3 score of 7.5 and rated as important. According to Microsoft, this vulnerability was publicly disclosed prior to a patch being made available. After applying the update, administrators should review the support article Exchange Server non-RFC compliant P2 FROM header detection. The supplemental guide notes that as part of a “secure by default” approach, the Exchange Server update for November will flag suspicious emails which may contain “malicious patterns in the P2 FROM header.” While this feature can be disabled, Microsoft strongly recommends leaving it enabled to provide further protection from phishing attempts and malicious emails.

Critical

CVE-2024-43639 | Windows Kerberos Remote Code Execution Vulnerability

CVE-2024-43639 is a critical RCE vulnerability affecting Windows Kerberos, an authentication protocol designed to verify user or host identities. It was assigned a CVSSv3 score of 9.8 and is rated as “Exploitation Less Likely.”

To exploit this vulnerability, an unauthenticated attacker needs to leverage a cryptographic protocol vulnerability in order to achieve RCE. No further details were provided by Microsoft about this vulnerability at the time this blog was published.

Important

29 CVEs | SQL Server Native Client Remote Code Execution Vulnerability

This month's release included 29 CVEs for RCEs affecting SQL Server Native Client. All of these CVEs received CVSSv3 scores of 8.8 and were rated as “Exploitation Less Likely.” Successful exploitation of these vulnerabilities can be achieved by convincing an authenticated user into connecting to a malicious SQL server database using an affected driver. A full list of the CVEs are included in the table below.

CVEDescriptionCVSSv3
CVE-2024-38255SQL Server Native Client Remote Code Execution Vulnerability8.8
CVE-2024-43459SQL Server Native Client Remote Code Execution Vulnerability8.8
CVE-2024-43462SQL Server Native Client Remote Code Execution Vulnerability8.8
CVE-2024-48993SQL Server Native Client Remote Code Execution Vulnerability8.8
CVE-2024-48994SQL Server Native Client Remote Code Execution Vulnerability8.8
CVE-2024-48995SQL Server Native Client Remote Code Execution Vulnerability8.8
CVE-2024-48996SQL Server Native Client Remote Code Execution Vulnerability8.8
CVE-2024-48997SQL Server Native Client Remote Code Execution Vulnerability8.8
CVE-2024-48998SQL Server Native Client Remote Code Execution Vulnerability8.8
CVE-2024-48999SQL Server Native Client Remote Code Execution Vulnerability8.8
CVE-2024-49000SQL Server Native Client Remote Code Execution Vulnerability8.8
CVE-2024-49001SQL Server Native Client Remote Code Execution Vulnerability8.8
CVE-2024-49002SQL Server Native Client Remote Code Execution Vulnerability8.8
CVE-2024-49003SQL Server Native Client Remote Code Execution Vulnerability8.8
CVE-2024-49004SQL Server Native Client Remote Code Execution Vulnerability8.8
CVE-2024-49005SQL Server Native Client Remote Code Execution Vulnerability8.8
CVE-2024-49006SQL Server Native Client Remote Code Execution Vulnerability8.8
CVE-2024-49007SQL Server Native Client Remote Code Execution Vulnerability8.8
CVE-2024-49008SQL Server Native Client Remote Code Execution Vulnerability8.8
CVE-2024-49009SQL Server Native Client Remote Code Execution Vulnerability8.8
CVE-2024-49010SQL Server Native Client Remote Code Execution Vulnerability8.8
CVE-2024-49011SQL Server Native Client Remote Code Execution Vulnerability8.8
CVE-2024-49012SQL Server Native Client Remote Code Execution Vulnerability8.8
CVE-2024-49013SQL Server Native Client Remote Code Execution Vulnerability8.8
CVE-2024-49014SQL Server Native Client Remote Code Execution Vulnerability8.8
CVE-2024-49015SQL Server Native Client Remote Code Execution Vulnerability8.8
CVE-2024-49016SQL Server Native Client Remote Code Execution Vulnerability8.8
CVE-2024-49017SQL Server Native Client Remote Code Execution Vulnerability8.8
CVE-2024-49018SQL Server Native Client Remote Code Execution Vulnerability8.8
Important

CVE-2024-43602 | Azure CycleCloud Remote Code Execution Vulnerability

CVE-2024-43602 is a RCE vulnerability in Microsoft’s Azure CycleCloud, a tool that helps in managing and orchestrating High Performance Computing (HPC) environments in Azure. This flaw received the highest CVSSv3 score of the month, a 9.9 and was rated as important. A user with basic permissions could exploit CVE-2024-43602 by sending specially crafted requests to a vulnerable AzureCloud CycleCloud cluster to modify its configuration. Successful exploitation would result in the user gaining root permissions, which could then be used to execute commands on any cluster in the Azure CycleCloud as well as steal admin credentials.

Tenable Solutions

A list of all the plugins released for Microsoft’s November 2024 Patch Tuesday update can be found here. As always, we recommend patching systems as soon as possible and regularly scanning your environment to identify those systems yet to be patched.

For more specific guidance on best practices for vulnerability assessments, please refer to our blog post on How to Perform Efficient Vulnerability Assessments with Tenable.

Get more information

Join Tenable's Security Response Team on the Tenable Community.
Learn more about Tenable One, the Exposure Management Platform for the modern attack surface.




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Fat Tuesday Sandra Brown.

A police officer is furious that his partner's murderer was acquitted. In a desperate act of revenge, he kidnaps the defense attorney's wife. Who will find redemption in this story of corruption and passion?




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The PA Senate Returns to Session This Past Week; And Bishop Senior is There for Tuesday’s Opening Prayer

The PA Senate returned to the Capitol for full sessions and committee meetings. The Bishop of Harrisburg, Timothy Senior gave the opening prayer on Tuesday. That is in the first of our Facebook posts offered here. https://www.facebook.com/share/v/gji9z8diELbaWi5E/?mibextid=WC7FNe https://www.facebook.com/share/v/JLLp8LZNLFuBAyrH/?mibextid=WC7FNe https://www.facebook.com/share/v/XRs363N9Mvpog1pe/?mibextid=WC7FNe https://www.facebook.com/share/v/wGTgGutdEcf6vX6V/?mibextid=WC7FNe https://www.facebook.com/share/v/JRyWvi2KkipabkwQ/?mibextid=WC7FNe https://www.facebook.com/share/v/3aBxFaPwQxATNBJj/?mibextid=WC7FNe https://www.facebook.com/share/v/L7H8rK475qyztwnM/?mibextid=WC7FNe




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Bank of England / Bank of Finland speakers combine for a panel discussion Tuesday

0900 GMT / 0400 US Eastern time: Olli Rehn, Governor of the Bank of Finland, and Bank of England Chief Economist Huw Pill speak on a panel at a conference organised by UBS in London

As Governor of the Bank of Finland Rehn is a member of the European Central Bank monetary policy board, the Governing Council.

Thus we'll get policy/economy comments relevant for the ECB and BoE for this one.

This article was written by Eamonn Sheridan at www.forexlive.com.




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OSCE Chairperson-in-Office Frank-Walter Steinmeier to visit Moldova on Tuesday

CHISINAU, 25 July 2016 – OSCE Chairperson-in-Office and German Federal Minister for Foreign Affairs Frank-Walter Steinmeier, is traveling to Moldova and will have talks in Chisinau and Tiraspol on 26 July 2016.

As the Spokesperson of the German Federal Foreign Office said in Berlin today, the visit to Moldova aims at strengthening the momentum that has recently been reinvigorated in the negotiation process on the settlement of the Transdniestrian conflict. On 2-3 June 2016 in Berlin the negotiators of the 5+2 Process met for the first time after a period of two years, and committed to undertaking concrete steps, including in the fields of ecology, education, transportation and telecommunications.

“We hope that there is a chance to bring this long-standing conflict step by step closer to a settlement,” said the Spokesperson.

In Chisinau, Steinmeier will meet with Speaker of Parliament Andrian Candu, Prime Minister Pavel Filip, Deputy Prime Minister and Minister of Foreign Affairs and European Integration Andrei Galbur, and Deputy Prime Minister for Reintegration and Moldovan Political Representative Gheorghe Balan.

In Tiraspol, the Chairperson-in-Office will meet a representative of the Transdniestrian leadership, Pavel Prokudin, Speaker of the Supreme Soviet, Vadim Krasnoslesky and the Transdniestrian Political Representative, Vitaly Ignatiev.

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