Vicky Pattison leaves fans 'horrified' as she lets a dog lick her mouth in 'stomach churning' clip
The former Geordie Shore star, 37, shared the 'Walkies' reel on Instagram on Friday as part of a collaboration with fresh dog food brand Butternut Box.
Six students drown and more than a dozen injured during school trip to Egyptian beach
Paramedics rushed to the beach in Alexandria, the country's second largest city, after reports that the students were struggling in the water, Egypt 's health ministry has confirmed.
Amid Service Disruption, Colt Confirms 'Criminal Group' Accessed Their Data, As Ransomware Gang Threatens to Sell It
British telecommunications service provider Colt Telecom "has offices in over 30 countries across North America, Europe, and Asia, reports CPO magazine. "It manages nearly 1,000 data centers and roughly 75,000 km of fiber infrastructure."
But now "a cyber attack has caused widespread multi-day service disruption..."
On August 14, 2025, the telecom giant said it had detected a cyber attack that began two days earlier, on August 12. Upon learning of the cyber intrusion, the telecommunications service provider responded by proactively taking some systems offline to contain the cyber attack. Although Colt Telecom's cyber incident response team was working around the clock to mitigate the impacts of the cyber attack, service disruption has persisted for days. However, the service disruption did not affect the company's core network infrastructure, suggesting that Colt customers could still access its network services... The company also did not provide a clear timeline for resolving the service disruption. A week after the apparent ransomware attack, Colt Online and the Voice API platform remained unavailable.
And now Colt Technology Services "confirms that customer documentation was stolen," reports the tech news site BleepingComputer:
"A criminal group has accessed certain files from our systems that may contain information related to our customers and posted the document titles on the dark web," reads an updated security incident advisory on Colt's site.
"We understand that this is concerning for you."
"Customers are able to request a list of filenames posted on the dark web from the dedicated call centre."
As first spotted by cybersecurity expert Kevin Beaumont, Colt added the no-index HTML meta tag to the web page, making it so it won't be indexed by search engines.
This statement comes after the Warlock Group began selling on the Ramp cybercrime forum what they claim is 1 million documents stolen from Colt. The documents are being sold for $200,000 and allegedly contain financial information, network architecture data, and customer information... The Warlock Group (aka Storm-2603) is a ransomware gang attributed to Chinese threat actors who utilize the leaked LockBit Windows and Babuk VMware ESXi encryptors in attacks... Last month, Microsoft reported that the threat actors were exploiting a SharePoint vulnerability to breach corporate networks and deploy ransomware.
"Colt is not the only telecom firm that has been named by WarLock on its leak website in recent days," SecurityWeek points out. "The cybercriminals claim to have also stolen data from France-based Orange."
Thanks to long-time Slashdot reader Z00L00K for sharing the news.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Amid Service Disruption, Colt Telecom Confirms 'Criminal Group' Accessed Their Data, As Ransomware Gang Threatens to Sell It
British telecommunications service provider Colt Telecom "has offices in over 30 countries across North America, Europe, and Asia, reports CPO magazine. "It manages nearly 1,000 data centers and roughly 75,000 km of fiber infrastructure."
But now "a cyber attack has caused widespread multi-day service disruption..."
On August 14, 2025, the telecom giant said it had detected a cyber attack that began two days earlier, on August 12. Upon learning of the cyber intrusion, the telecommunications service provider responded by proactively taking some systems offline to contain the cyber attack. Although Colt Telecom's cyber incident response team was working around the clock to mitigate the impacts of the cyber attack, service disruption has persisted for days. However, the service disruption did not affect the company's core network infrastructure, suggesting that Colt customers could still access its network services... The company also did not provide a clear timeline for resolving the service disruption. A week after the apparent ransomware attack, Colt Online and the Voice API platform remained unavailable.
And now Colt Technology Services "confirms that customer documentation was stolen," reports the tech news site BleepingComputer:
"A criminal group has accessed certain files from our systems that may contain information related to our customers and posted the document titles on the dark web," reads an updated security incident advisory on Colt's site.
"We understand that this is concerning for you."
"Customers are able to request a list of filenames posted on the dark web from the dedicated call centre."
As first spotted by cybersecurity expert Kevin Beaumont, Colt added the no-index HTML meta tag to the web page, making it so it won't be indexed by search engines.
This statement comes after the Warlock Group began selling on the Ramp cybercrime forum what they claim is 1 million documents stolen from Colt. The documents are being sold for $200,000 and allegedly contain financial information, network architecture data, and customer information... The Warlock Group (aka Storm-2603) is a ransomware gang attributed to Chinese threat actors who utilize the leaked LockBit Windows and Babuk VMware ESXi encryptors in attacks... Last month, Microsoft reported that the threat actors were exploiting a SharePoint vulnerability to breach corporate networks and deploy ransomware.
"Colt is not the only telecom firm that has been named by WarLock on its leak website in recent days," SecurityWeek points out. "The cybercriminals claim to have also stolen data from France-based Orange."
Thanks to long-time Slashdot reader Z00L00K for sharing the news.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Search-capable AI agents may cheat on benchmark tests
Data contamination can make models seem more capable than they really are
Researchers with Scale AI have found that search-based AI models may cheat on benchmark tests by fetching the answers directly from online sources rather than deriving those answers through a "reasoning" process.…
The reason part two of Meghan Markle's show With Love 'lacked pulling power' for A-listers and left the show with an 'underwhelming' cast, royal expert claims
There is already a glaring similarity between the first season of Meghan Markle's show, With Love, Meghan, and its upcoming second installment - the subpar calibre of guest stars.
Essex woman thanks police as domestic abuser finally jailed for four years
George Bloxham, 31, formerly of Parker Avenue, Hertford, was jailed at Chelmsford Crown Court on Friday August 15 after admitting actual bodily harm.
Essex woman thanks police as domestic abuser finally jailed for four years
George Bloxham, 31, formerly of Parker Avenue, Hertford, was jailed at Chelmsford Crown Court on Friday August 15 after admitting actual bodily harm.
Body language expert reveals the reason Meghan's 'mean girl' moment where she was filmed 'laughing' at Princess Charlotte isn't all that it seems
Less than a month into her role as the Duchess of Sussex, Meghan Markle joined the Royal Family for her balcony debut to celebrate Trooping the Colour on June 9, 2018.
Mom of besieged teenage trans athlete launches furious attack on critics as school meeting turns to chaos
On Thursday, parents turned up to speak at the Riverside Unified School District board meeting, with Hernandez's mother Nereyda Hernandez accusing one official of 'moral failure'.
The very varied fates of Katie Price's exes as she reignites bitter feuds with Peter Andre, Kieran Hayler and Alex Reid ahead of new tell-all documentary
From three marriages, eight engagements and many public fallouts, Daily Mail looks back at the varied fates of Katie's exes.
Lord Blunkett says Starmer should suspend ECHR to deport thousands of rejected asylum seekers and 'get a grip' on migrant crisis
The ex-Labour home secretary urged ministers to take the 'radical' step as fury grows over the use of nearly 200 hotels to house 32,000 asylum seekers at taxpayers' expense
The historic Essex walk that takes you through a pretty seaside town
It will take an hour to complete
Face of jailed violent thug who attacked his ex-partner
He's been jailed for more than three years
The 27 investment pieces under £100 our fashion editors can't stop lusting after for autumn
Are you in a late-summer fashion slump? It's not quite cold enough for your autumn wardrobe, but your breezy dresses feel tired. Now's the time to invest in a couple of pick-me-up pieces
Fury as British Paralympians turn backs during Israeli national anthem in 'hugely offensive' protest
The Paralympic team, dressed in white, appeared to swivel at a 90-degree angle away from the podium as the Israeli flag was raised while the country's national anthem was played
Labour council leader welcomes 'fantastic' flags display but issues warning to those 'not honouring England'
He said the flags "show the pride that so many people feel in our country"
Revealed: The 'worst boss in the world', a £160,000 bar tab... and why BrewDog is waking up to a £90m hangover. Our special report lifts the lid on the beer brand and its controversial founder James Watt
In the amber glow of Bertie's Whisky Bar in the Royal Deeside village of Braemar, a night of exceptional hedonism was getting under way.
Celebrity siblings who have fallen out over their partners - with the explosive feuds tearing families apart
They say that blood is thicker than water. Yet for several stars, blood ties have turned into bad vibes after striking up a romance with someone their sibling didn't approve of.
Celebrity names you've been mispronouncing: As Kirsten Dunst claims 'everyone' has been saying her moniker wrong - how many stars have YOU been naming incorrectly?
As Hollywood stars they're used to being described as 'household names'. Yet ironically, many of the celebrities we know have been going by the wrong monikers in the public eye.