Aaron Rodgers’ go-to cleanse could involve oily enemas, bloodletting, vomiting

Close shot of football player in full gear.

Enlarge / Quarterback Aaron Rodgers #12 of the Green Bay Packers warms up prior to the game against the Minnesota Vikings at Lambeau Field on January 2, 2022, in Green Bay, Wisconsin. (credit: Getty | Patrick McDermott)

In what may be the worst bait-and-switch in the history of bait-and-switches, sports fans tuned in to The Pat McAfee Show on Tuesday in anticipation that one of his regular guests, NFL MVP quarterback Aaron Rodgers, might deliver significant news on the future of his career. But there was no such news. Instead, Rodgers gave a hearty endorsement for a horrifying 12-day cleanse that can sometimes involve oily enemas, bloodletting, and forced vomiting.

“There will be no news today,” Rodgers said to McAfee on the show. “No decision on my future. As I was texting with you yesterday, I just got out of a 12-day panchakarma. Look that up. I know you did after we talked. It’s a cleanse that originated in India. It’s been going on for thousands of years, and it’s something I’ve done in the offseason. So I’m just getting my hand above the sand now and seeing what’s going on there.”

Panchakarma is described as a cleansing and purification technique in Ayurvedic medicine, which is a long-standing, pseudoscientific Indian medicine system. The system is not based on science and has little scientific evidence backing it, according to the National Institutes of Health. The best that can be said for it is that a tiny amount of data suggests Ayurvedic herbal mixtures may help relieve osteoarthritis pain and manage type II diabetes. But more data is needed to solidify those benefits, and evidence is lacking for benefits of any other conditions.

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Trump’s social app marred by bugs and apparent ban on Devin Nunes cow accounts

President Trump's banned Twitter account seen on the display of a smartphone.

Enlarge / Trump decided to make his own social network after being banned from Twitter. (credit: Getty Images | Justin Sullivan)

The rollout of Donald Trump’s social network has predictably been a disaster. Truth Social’s debut on Monday was marred by technical problems and a gigantic waiting list, while some people who actually were able to use the service complained of being “censored.”

Truth Social “has been almost entirely inaccessible in the first days of its grand debut because of technical glitches, a 13-hour outage and a 300,000-person waitlist,” The Washington Post wrote yesterday. Trump Media & Technology Group CEO Devin Nunes said on a Fox News show that Truth Social’s goal is to be “fully operational at least within the United States” by the end of March. The waiting list is now over 500,000.

Truth Social is available only on iOS. I used the iOS app to sign up on Monday, to test whether I could create an account despite all the technical problems. My account was created, but I am still #188,221 on the waiting list. An Android app is supposedly “coming soon” to the Play Store. A status-update page said Monday that Truth Social developers have “stabilized the account creation process” and “are working to increase the rate of new account creation.” Truth Social was built using Mastodon open source software.

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Dmitry Rogozin says he does not appreciate “openly hostile” US policy

A middle-aged man dressed for cold weather.

Enlarge / Russia’s chief of spaceflight, Dmitry Rogozin, is barred by US sanctions from traveling to the United States. (credit: Yuri SmityukTASS via Getty Images)

On Wednesday morning, the sprawling Russian corporation that oversees the country’s space activities, Roscosmos, issued a statement from its general director on Twitter that appeared to speak both to NASA as well as Russian leader Vladimir Putin.

“We value highly our professional relations with NASA, but as an (ethnic) Russian and a citizen of Russia I am very unhappy with the openly hostile policy of the USA toward my country,” said the statement by Dmitry Rogozin, who heads Russian space policy and interfaces directly with NASA Administrator Bill Nelson.

What prompted the statement from Rogozin is not immediately clear. On Monday, he tweeted, “Glory to Russia” following Putin’s speech on Ukraine and Russia’s right to occupy territories of the former Soviet Union. Rogozin is a member of Putin’s inner circle, having previously served as a deputy prime minister in the government before leading Roscosmos.

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Russia’s most cutthroat hackers infect network devices with new botnet malware

Russia’s most cutthroat hackers infect network devices with new botnet malware

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Hackers for one of Russia’s most elite and brazen spy agencies have infected home and small-office network devices around the world with a previously unseen malware that turns them into attack platforms that can steal confidential data and target other networks.

Cyclops Blink, as the advanced malware has been dubbed, has infected about 1 percent of network firewall devices made by network device manufacturer Watchguard, the company said on Wednesday. The malware is able to abuse a legitimate firmware update mechanism found in infected devices in a way that gives it persistence, meaning it survives reboots.

Like VPNFilter, but stealthier

Cyclops Blink has been circulating for almost three years and replaces VPNFilter, the malware that in 2018 researchers found infecting about 500,000 home and small office routers. It contained a veritable Swiss Army Knife that allowed hackers to steal or manipulate traffic and to monitor some SCADA protocols used by industrial control systems. The US Department of Justice linked the hacks to the Main Intelligence Directorate of the General Staff of the Armed Forces of the Russian Federation, typically abbreviated as the GRU.

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Companies selling fake reviews are “tarnishing” brand, Amazon says

Cropped human hand arranging 5 stars against purple background.

Enlarge (credit: Getty Images)

After being pressed by the media and government organizations about paid reviews on its site, Amazon is taking its fight against compensated reviews to the courts. On Tuesday, the company filed lawsuits against AppSally and Rebatest, firms that Amazon claims sell “fake” positive Amazon reviews.

The claims: 5-star reviews for sale

Amazon’s two lawsuits in the King County Superior Court in Seattle against AppSally (PDF) and Rebatest (PDF) provide in-depth details of fake review packages purportedly offered by the companies, which have both been operating since at least 2018. Amazon believes AppSally and Rebatest are hurting customer trust by selling packages that let sellers pay for positive reviews of their products.

Amazon’s Community Guidelines say that “creating, modifying, or posting content in exchange for compensation of any kind, (including free or discounted products, refunds, or reimbursements)” and “offering compensation or requesting compensation (including free or discounted products) in exchange for creating, modifying, or posting content” is not allowed.

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Today’s best deals: Eufy indoor security camera, Apple gift cards, and more

Today’s best deals: Eufy indoor security camera, Apple gift cards, and more

Enlarge (credit: Ars Technica)

It’s time for another Dealmaster. The latest update to our roundup of the best tech deals from around the web includes a good price on Eufy’s Solo IndoorCam C24. Normally priced at around $40, the Anker sub-brand’s indoor security camera is now down to $30 at Amazon when you clip an on-page coupon. This deal matches the best price we’ve seen over the past year and comes within $2 of the lowest price we’ve tracked.

We’ve recommended the IndoorCam C24 in past gift guides; it was formerly branded the “Indoor Cam 2K,” but it remains an excellent value all the same. It captures clear and reasonably smooth 2K-resolution video during the day and night, with a solid-if-not-spectacular 125-degree field of view and an 8X digital zoom. You can save your recordings locally over a microSD card or NAS (via RTSP), through the cloud via a reasonably priced subscription plan (which starts at $3/month or $30/year), or through Apple’s HomeKit Secure Video service. The device also supports Alexa and the Google Assistant in addition to HomeKit.

Eufy’s app is easy to use and is filled with common-sense features. You can manually record a screenshot or clip, set off a remote alarm function, or use a built-in mic and speaker to issue alerts in real time. The IndoorCam C24 does a good job of picking up movement and alerting you accordingly, but you can also use the app to set up designated activity zones and adjust the sensitivity of the motion detection altogether. The camera can detect pets and specific sounds like a baby’s crying, too, and there’s a web portal for live-feed viewing.

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An asteroid killed dinosaurs in spring—which might explain why mammals survived

An international team of scientists used synchrotron radiation to image and analyze fossilized fish from the Tanis deposit in North Dakota.

Some 66 million years ago, a catastrophic event wiped out three-quarters of all plant and animal species on Earth, most notably taking down the dinosaurs. The puzzle of why so many species perished while others survived has long intrigued scientists.

A new paper published in the journal Nature concludes that one reason for this evolutionary selectivity is the timing of the impact. Based on their analysis of fossilized fish killed immediately after the impact, the authors have determined that the extinction event occurred in the spring—at least in the Northern Hemisphere—interrupting the annual reproductive cycles of many species.

As we’ve reported previously, the most widely accepted explanation for what triggered that catastrophic mass extinction is known as the “Alvarez hypothesis,” after the late physicist Luis Alvarez and his geologist son, Walter. In 1980, they proposed that the extinction event may have been caused by a massive asteroid or comet hitting the Earth.

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