З початку року нейтралізовано майже 4000 кібератак на органи влади та критичну інфраструктуру – СБУ

З початку року Служба безпеки нейтралізувала майже чотири тисячі кібератак на електронні системи центральних органів влади та критичної інфраструктури України, повідомила пресслужба відомства.

«Більшість ворожих кібератак спрямована на пошук несанкціонованого доступу до електронного документообігу держустанов і технологічних систем інфраструктури. Зазвичай такими «точками входу» для російських хакерів є публічно доступні сервіси, насамперед – електронна пошта», – повідомили в СБУ.

Повідомляється, що нині СБУ підключила електронні системи понад 1700 представників урядових структур і стратегічно важливих об’єктів до платформи обміну інформацією про виявлені кіберінциденти. Ця платформа має назву MISP-UA.

На початку серпня СБУ повідомила про блокування спроби російської воєнної розвідки отримати доступ до бойової системи обміну даних ЗСУ. За даними української спецслужби, російські хакери намагалися проникнути в українські військові мережі та організувати збір розвідданих.

Як заявив тоді керівник департаменту кібербезпеки СБУ Ілля Вітюк, відповідальність за російські кібератаки лежить на хакерському угрупованні Sandworm, яке підконтрольне російській воєнній розвідці. За даними СБУ, загалом фахівці відомства виявили майже 10 російських шпигунських програм, які були призначені для отримання інформації із системи обміну даних ЗСУ.

Затриманому напередодні на хабарі меру Сум оголосили про підозру 

2 жовтня стало відомо про затримання на хабарі мера Сум та директора департаменту інфраструктури міста. Обох фігурантів затримали «на гарячому» у момент отримання  готівки у 1,4 млн грн

Мера Сум і директора департаменту інфраструктури міста затримали на хабарі

Служби безпеки України та Національного антикорупційного бюро повідомили у понеділок про затримання на хабарі мера Сум та директора департаменту інфраструктури міста.

«Посадовці вимагали хабарі від місцевих підприємців за безперешкодне ведення бізнесу у місті. Задокументовано, що вони «обклали даниною» місцеву компанію, яка займалася вивезенням сміття. Фігуранти вимагали з підприємця 2 млн 130 тис. грн. У разі відмови платити – погрожували штучними перешкодами у веденні бізнесу. СБУ та НАБУ затримали обох фігурантів «на гарячому» у момент отримання одного із траншів неправомірної вигоди у розмірі 1,4 млн грн», – повідомили в СБУ.

Наразі вирішується питання щодо повідомлення затриманим про підозру за статтею «прийняття пропозиції, обіцянки або одержання неправомірної вигоди службовою особою».

«Пізніше посадовцям буде обрано запобіжний захід», – повідомили в СБУ.

Наразі тривають першочергові слідчі дії, долали в НАБУ.

Відомства не вказують імені затриманого мера, однак з відкритих даних відомо, що мером Сум є Олександр Лисенко. Директором департаменту інфраструктури міста на сайті Сумської міськради вказано Олександра Журбу.

7 Months After Entering Hospice, Former President Jimmy Carter Celebrates 99th Birthday

Seven months after the Carter Center announced he was entering end of life hospice care, former President Jimmy Carter and his wife Rosalynn made a rare, surprise appearance during a peanut festival in their hometown of Plains, Georgia.

As they waved to bystanders while riding in an SUV that proceeded down the main street of Plains, it marked the beginning of a week celebrating Jimmy Carter’s 99th birthday on Sunday – a milestone few thought the longest living U.S. President might reach.

“I think there is a misunderstanding about hospice that its only for people who are days away from death,” explains author Jonathan Alter. “That’s not what the hospice movements says.”

Alter, who wrote a biography about Jimmy Carter titled His Very Best, says the Carters are choosing to spend the end of their lives in much the same way as the rest of it. “Do as much as you can for as many as you can for as long as you can,” he says.

While retired from public life, Alter says announcing Carter’s transition to hospice, and revealing that Rosalynn Carter has dementia, provides the former president and first lady the opportunity to use their journey as another teachable moment for others.

“It was very intentional on their part to do some good for the world by sending a message that you don’t have to shrink from these end-of-life decisions, and there are other options for letting go,” he says.

While they have let go of the day-to-day operations of the global non-profit they founded in 1982, Carter Center CEO Paige Alexander says thousands of employees and volunteers around the world continue their work without interruption promoting peace and combating neglected tropical diseases.

“The last time we talked, he didn’t ask me about politics, he didn’t ask me about anything except guinea worm numbers,” Alexander told VOA during a recent Skype interview.

In a 2015 press conference announcing he was battling life threatening cancer, which he recovered from, Carter expressed his greatest wish: “I want the last guinea worm to die before I do,” he told the assembled crowd.

When the Carter Center took on guinea worm in the 1980s, there were 3.5 million cases in 21 countries. Alexander says the complete eradication of the neglected tropical disease is now closer than ever. “We’re down to six human cases in two countries,” she says.

Alexander told VOA she continues to have occasional phone conversations with President Carter.

“When I spoke to him last to wish him a happy birthday early, he said ‘I’m not quite sure how happy it is to be turning 99.’ His body is failing him. He doesn’t have the same physical abilities he used to have, but mentally, he remains pretty sharp, and I think that keeps him going,” Alexander said.

She notes that Carter is aware, and appreciative of the continued outpouring of support and admiration, most recently the stream of happy birthday wishes by video and photos the Carter Center is collecting for an interactive online mosaic.

“I think it might be the special sauce of what keeps him going right now. That and peanut butter ice cream,” she said.

It is a special dessert Alexander says the Carters enjoy together, sometimes surrounded by family, in the small community they have called home since the 1920s.

“They are exactly where they want to be – together … in their hometown of Plains, Georgia,” says Alexander. 

Biden Signs Bill to Fund US Government, Avoid Shutdown

President Joe Biden has signed a bill to fund the U.S. government through mid-November and avoid a shutdown, less than an hour before money for federal agencies was set to run out.

Biden posted a picture of himself signing the bill on X, the social media platform previously known as Twitter, late Saturday night. In the message, he urged Congress to get to work immediately to pass funding bills for the full fiscal year.

The U.S. Senate, in a rare weekend meeting, approved a funding bill Saturday night, sending it to President Joe Biden for his signature and averting a widely dreaded shutdown of the federal government.

The bill, which passed the Senate 88-9 after winning approval in the House of Representatives, would fund the federal government through Nov. 17. The bill contains $16 billion in disaster aid sought by Biden but did not include money to help Ukraine in its war against Russia’s invasion.

After the vote, Biden released a statement saying the bill’s passage prevented “an unnecessary crisis that would have inflicted needless pain on millions of hardworking Americans.”

“We will have avoided a shutdown,” Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer said in a statement after the vote. “Bipartisanship, which has been the trademark of the Senate, has prevailed. And the American people can breathe a sigh of relief.”

Had the bill not been approved by Congress and signed by the president by midnight Saturday, the federal government would have shut down.

More than 4 million U.S. military service personnel and government workers would not be paid, although essential services, such as air traffic control and official border entry points would still be staffed. Pensioners might not get their monthly government payments in time to pay bills and buy groceries, and national parks could be closed.

For days all of that seemed inevitable.

The abrupt turn of events began Saturday when Speaker of the House Kevin McCarthy changed tactics and put forward the funding bill that hard-line members of his Republican caucus opposed.

The House passed the bill, 335-91. More Democrats supported it than Republicans, even though it does not contain aid for Ukraine, a priority for Biden, Democrats and many Senate Republicans.

“Extreme MAGA Republicans have lost, the American people have won,” top House Democrat Hakeem Jeffries told reporters ahead of the vote.

Republican Representative Lauren Boebert criticized the passage of the short-term stopgap bill.

“We should have forced the Senate to take up the four appropriations bills that the House has passed. That should have been our play,” she told CNN. “We should have forced them to come to the negotiating table, to come to conference, to hash out our differences.”

McCarthy is likely to face a motion from the right-wing members of his party to remove him as speaker.

“If somebody wants to remove me because I want to be the adult in the room, go ahead and try,” McCarthy said of the threat to oust him. “But I think this country is too important.”

Ukraine aid still likely

In his statement, Biden noted the lack of funding for Ukraine in the bill and said, “We cannot under any circumstances allow American support for Ukraine to be interrupted.”

Support for Ukraine remains strong in Congress and late Saturday night, a bipartisan group of Senate leadership members, led by Schumer and Minority Leader Mitch McConnell, released a statement vowing to ensure the United States continues “to provide critical and sustained security and economic support for Ukraine.”

NBC News quoted an unnamed U.S. official as saying Biden and the Defense Department have funds to meet Ukraine’s battlefield needs “for a bit longer,” but it is “imperative” that Congress pass a Ukraine funding bill soon.

In the House, the lone Democrat to vote against the funding bill was Representative Mike Quigley of Illinois, the co-chair of the Congressional Ukraine Caucus. “Protecting Ukraine is in our national interest,” he said.

“This does look very chaotic, but this is not the first time it’s happened,” Todd Belt, director of the school of political management at The George Washington University, told VOA. “There is a price that has to be paid here. But that is the price of democracy. It does seem very messy sometimes. But eventually, usually you get some compromise.”

Such shutdowns have occurred four times in the last decade in the U.S., but often have lasted just a day or two until lawmakers reach a compromise to fully restart government operations. However, one shutdown that occurred during the administration of former President Donald Trump lasted 35 days, as he unsuccessfully sought funding to build a wall along the U.S.-Mexican border.