Monthly Archives: June 2017

CF Mller appointment spells end for Robin Hood Gardens – Architects’ Journal

Posted: June 28, 2017 at 6:22 am

Plans byHaworth Tompkins and Metropolitan Workshop to flatten and replace the western block of Alison and Peter Smithsons 1972 Brutalist landmark in east London were approved last year. The phase 2 scheme includes 268 new homes in four new buildings two by each practice (blocks C1, C2, C3 and D).

NowCF Mller has landed phase 3, which will see the eastern side of the Smithsons block demolished to make way for 330 new homes half of them affordable.

The units will range from one-bedroom flats to five-bedroom maisonettes.

CF Mller was chosen by project backer Swan Housing Association ahead of five other firms - including HTA and HawkinsBrown - following a competitive process. According to Swan, the practice shone out on the basis of its excellent design ideas for Blackwall Reach and its focus on inside out design which puts the residents of the buildings first.

Swans executive director of regeneration and development, Geoff Pearce. saidCF Mller was passionate about ensuring we deliver human-scale street scenes and links into the landscape to offset the impact of the busy external environment, which is close to the Blackwall Tunnel.

As a regeneration team, we felt strongly the CF Mller team would bring a fresh and positive approach to the next phase of Blackwall Reach and are delighted to be able to further develop the positive working relationship which has proved so productive in relation to their work for us on our regeneration of Laindon Shopping Centre.

CF Mller associate partnerRolf Nielsenadded: Our approach to this challenging project is to develop an architectural and placemaking response with the focus on designing the best possible new homes within a challenging location.

This complemented Swans ambitious ideas for regenerating Blackwall Reach.

Split into five phases, the Blackwall Reach project has been masterplanned by Metropolitan Workshop and will eventually replace the estates252 homes with 1,575 new units.

Site plan

The Blackwall Reach Regeneration Project - phase 3 [buildings E and F]

In 2015, the Twentieth Century Society failed in its bid to get statutory protection for the concrete estate. Heritage minister Tracey Crouch granted a second certificate of immunity for the blocks meaning the Smithsons buildings cannot be considered again for listing until 2020.

In 2008 then architecture minister Margaret Hodge also refused to list the estate, agreeing with English Heritage that it was unfit for people to live in.

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CF Tennis Club Junior Winter Tournament fun – News24

Posted: at 6:22 am

THE CF Tennis Club Junior Winter Tournament was played over the weekend at Kershaw Park tennis centre in Pietermaritzburg.

Tennis stars from U8s to U18s took part in perfect wintery, sunny conditions, where top-class tennis was on display.

Participants impressed the organiser Chris Folker from CF Tennis with their ability, progress, and above all, sportsmanship.

A special mention was made to two development tennis stars who played like stars in the open section - Zakhele Hlela and Siyabonda Mbele - being an inspiration to other players.

Hailing from Durban, Ladysmith, Winterton and locally, young tennis players battled it out for the honors of a CF Tennis trophy and various CF Tennis branded prizes.

Everyone experienced wonderful support from parents, grandparents and family members, which added to this events success.

- Supplied

Singles Trophy Winners:

U8 Boys

1st Joshua Nicholson

2nd Luca Puddu

Girls

1st Libby Chapman

2nd Belle Hofmeyr

U10 Boys

1st Angus Fyvie

2nd Jordan Doig

Girls

1st Jade Kelly

2nd Jasmin Kelly

U12 Boys

1st Oliver Gaboreau

2nd Sebastian Baroreau

Girls

1st Grace Wardlaw

2nd Georgie Henderson

U14 Boys

1st Connor Doig

2nd Thando Tshili

Girls

1st Katie Ramduth

2nd Chloe Morton

Open Boys

1st Gavin Veenstra

2nd Kaelan Ramduth

G irls

1st Daniella Samoulihan

2nd Christine Hill

Doubles Trophy Winners:

U8 Boys

1st Rex Holdsworth and Joshua Nicholson

2nd Nkazi Dlamini and Luca Puddu

U8 Girls

1st Mikje Bocking and Libby Chapman

2nd Belle Hofmeyr and Phiwa Malinga

U10 Boys

1st Angus Fyvie and Paul Samouilhan

2nd Karl Dedekind and William Gilson

U10 Girls

1st Jess Henderson and Amy Gerber

2nd Holly Hofmeyr and Sienna Solms

U12 Boys

1st Oliver and Sebastian Gaboreau

2nd Daniel Peckham & Ntando Tshili

U12 Girls

1st Georgie Henderson and Julie Schoeman

2nd Abigail Newman and Grace Wardlaw

U14 Girls

1st Grace Love and Leanna Samoulihan

2nd Brooke Veenstra and Kaitlyn Ramduth

Open Girls

1st Daniella Samoulihan and Chloe Morton

2nd Christine Hill and Michaela Seelen

O pen Boys

1st Gavin Veenstra and Kaelan Ramduth

2nd Zakhele Hlela and Siyabonda Mbele

Mixed Doubles Open

Ben Olivier and Mandy Mallen

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CF Tennis Club Junior Winter Tournament fun - News24

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Target Price for CF Industries Holdings, Inc. (CF) now above 50 DMA – NY Stock News

Posted: at 6:22 am

Target Price for CF Industries Holdings, Inc. (CF) now above 50 DMA
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CF Industries Holdings, Inc. (CF) has presented a rich pool of technical data in recent sessions. These are the trends we've been tracking and how we feel they should be played in the current environment. Some people say the past is not an accurate ...

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John McEnroe, Serena Williams and political correctness – Washington Examiner

Posted: at 6:21 am

Speaking to CBS in New York City on Tuesday, former tennis star John McEnroe refused to apologize for saying that Serena Williams would be ranked around 700th if she played on the male circuit.

Questioned by the CBS hosts, McEnroe was unrepentant. He had no intention of upsetting Serena Williams, he said, but nor did he regret his comments.

Still, what was more interesting in the interview was how the hosts embraced political correctness.

Under fire, McEnroe threw the contention back at Charlie Rose, asking him what rank he believed Serena would hold were she on the men's circuit. Rose is a tennis fan and knows the tour. But he couldn't bring himself to answer truthfully. Even when pushed, Rose stated, "She seemed pretty strong to me."

Next up, Gayle King challenged McEnroe. His comments, said Gayle, "belittle" female sporting accomplishments. Evidently angered by McEnroe's rebuttal, King asked McEnroe where he would rank on the men's tour. The 58-year-old responded, "about 1,200th in the world." It was a clever riposte. McEnroe suggested that Williams is a better player than him (she'd be 700th, he's 1,200th).

Regardless, the exchange was embarrassing. The CBS hosts clearly believed that they had a responsibility to slap down McEnroe's original comment. They were not there to question McEnroe, they were there to flay him. It didn't matter that McEnroe was right or wrong, but only that he be punished.

Of course, anyone who knows tennis knows that McEnroe is right. In the power of shots and endurance of the players, the male circuit is stronger than the women's. That's not a sexist comment. It's a fact of nature. As comparative serve speeds attest, facts are facts. It's as obvious as saying that a B-2 bomber carries more explosive power than a F-18 Super Hornet.

And it's not just the statistics of the court. Consider the relative daily attendance and TV viewing figures for major tennis tournaments. At Wimbledon, for example, figures for the gentlemen's semifinals or quarterfinals are greater than at the ladies' equivalent. The viewers know that the men's game is faster and stronger. And for that reason, many find it more compelling.

This doesn't take away from the accomplishment of the female players on the tour. From working at Wimbledon for seven years, I know firsthand the exceptional athleticism and skill that defines female tennis players. In the end, this is just a question of biology. And up against the male circuit, Serena Williams would not find the extraordinary success that she has attained. We should be able to admit that and be comfortable with it.

And we should be able to celebrate Serena Williams for being the best tennis player of her sex. She is a far better player on the women's tour than McEnroe ever was on the men's.

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Wednesday, June 28, 2017: Mueller will uncover the truth, ‘political … – Bangor Daily News

Posted: at 6:21 am

Millinocket hospital provides good care

Millinocket residents have recently been bombarded by mailings from an unknown author. The mailings speak of a malpractice lawsuit against the Millinocket Regional Hospital and how a pregnant woman was awarded $1.8 million from the suit.

While the story is true, Im not sure what the intent of these mailings are. They seem to imply that the residents of the Millinocket area should stop using Millinocket Regional Hospital as our health care provider. It seems this person is an advocate for closing down one of the only health resources we have left here in an area that has been devastated by an economic downturn.

To have this facility available in a town of 4,500 people is incredible. Is this person really asking us to drive 45 minutes to an hour for our health care? What about emergency care? Now these mailings have implied that the quality of health care is reduced because of the fact that Millinocket Regional Hospital uses physician assistants instead of real doctors. If Millinocket Regional Hospital has made a financial decision to use physician assistants instead of doctors for emergency room care, and that decision helps keep the hospital open, Im OK with that.

To imply that they are any less professional or knowledgeable is flat out wrong. Of the many occasions Ive visited the emergency room, both personally and with my business, Ive never had anything but the best of care, been seen promptly and dealt with true professionals.

Dean Rodrigue

Millinocket

Im certain Maine State Chamber of Commerce President Dana Connors knows that because two things happen at the same time doesnt mean one caused the other. The reasons someone moves to one locale over another are varied and complicated and often have nothing to do with taxes.

People are supposedly abandoning Connecticut in droves because of a tax increase on high income earners. And he believes the same will happen in Maine if the Legislature recognizes the will of the people and leaves in place the 3 percent surtax on annual income above $200,000 to fund the states share of public education at the 55 percent level, as mandated by the voters many years ago.

Connors plays the economic development card in his June 26 BDN OpEd, hoping well believe we can have that as a state without adequate investments in education.

Fewer than 10 percent of small businesses will be impacted by the surtax. If I made $250,000 as a small-business owner, I will owe an additional $1,500.

The prosperity we experienced as a country in the 1900s was due in large part to the investments our parents and grandparents made in education, infrastructure, research and development.

Business owners should be applauded for their hard work and their willingness to take risks. And they need to acknowledge that their success is due, at least in part, to the collective investments weve all made in structures and systems that support our commerce and our democracy.

We get what we pay for. Just ask Kansas.

Mary Ann Larson

Portland

The similarity of Vladimir Putins and Donald Trumps personalities is remarkable and explains how each requires loyalty beyond anything else.

Putin surrounds himself with long-term, mostly business allies, and Trump, his family. Such is oligarchy. Within a constitutional democracy such as ours, Trump is a rat in the larder.

I have confidence that our system can right itself, and the first step is an exterminator such as Special Counsel Robert Mueller. The truth will come out, notwithstanding a parallel reality that is not real. Otherwise, two party representative democracy is on the pale.

Philip C. Groce

Union

Not using derogatory and offensive names for women, Jews, Roman Catholics, Irish, Native Americans, African-Americans, Latinos, Asians, and Middle-Easterners isnt political correctness. Using respectful names is simply decent behavior.

But if thats what we call being PC, then I definitely take issue with William Duddys pronouncement in his June 24 BDN letter to the editor that multiculturalism and being PC are the worst things to have happened to the United States.

Being kinder and generous to different peoples is an excellent way for us all to be decent human beings to each other.

Joyce Cornwell

Lamoine

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Yves Tumor’s New Music Video is a Creepy Story of Cloning & Biohacking – Out Magazine

Posted: at 6:20 am

Queer musician Yves Tumor's new film, for the frenetic track "Broke In," is a chilling exploration of cloning, biohacking, and being buried alive. For the project, Tumor tapped Berlin filmmakers Sam Dye and Bliss Resting to direct, with lyrics by UK musician Oxhy.

Its about feeling crushed by the city of London, walking around the streets and feeling no escape, feeling like the city youre from wants you out, Oxhy told Dazed. Needing release, but at the same time constantly remembering the violence that the desire for freedom as a male has meant, historically and currently.

Much of the film sees Oxhy covered in dirt, with just his eyes and his muddy teeth visible. The result is a highly jarring, unsettling film that includes images of great violence and oppression.

Oxhy is the real star of this film, said Dye and Resting.We put him through so much, its fantastic to have such dedicated people to work with. Always a star, no matter how much hes choking.

Tumor's debut album,Serpent Music, came out last year, and impressed us with its experimental, atmospheric approach to creating a queer soundscape. Tumor is based in Turin, Italy, and an affiliate of another highly important LGBTQ musician, Mykki Blanco.

Take a look at the video, below:

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To find new drugs, make ‘libraries’ from DNA – Futurity: Research News

Posted: at 6:20 am

Anew technology can clone thousands of genes at once and compile libraries of proteins from DNA samples, potentially speeding up the search for new drugs.

Discovering the function of a gene requires cloning a DNA sequence and expressing it. Until now, this was performed on a one-gene-at-a-time basis, causing a bottleneck.

We think that the rapid, affordable, and high-throughput cloning of proteins and other genetic elements will greatly accelerate biological research to discover functions of molecules encoded by genomes and match the pace at which new genome sequencing data is coming out, says Biju Parekkadan, an associate professor in the biomedical engineering Department at Rutgers University-New Brunswick.

In a study published in the journal Nature Biomedical Engineering, the researchers show that their technologyLASSO (long-adapter single-strand oligonucleotide) probescan capture and clone thousands of long DNA fragments at once.

As a proof-of-concept, the researchers cloned more than 3,000 DNA fragments from E. coli bacteria, commonly used as a model organism with a catalogued genome sequence available.

We captured about 95 percent of the gene targets we set out to capture, many of which were very large in DNA length, which has been challenging in the past, Parekkadan says. I think there will certainly be more improvements over time.

They can now take a genome sequence (or many of them) and make a protein library for screening with unprecedented speed, cost-effectiveness, and precision, allowing rapid discovery of potentially beneficial biomolecules from a genome.

In conducting their research, they coincidentally solved a longstanding problem in the genome sequencing field.

When it comes to genetic sequencing of individual genomes, todays gold standard is to sequence small pieces of DNA one by one and overlay them to map out the full genome code. But short reads can be hard to interpret during the overlaying process and there hasnt been a way to sequence long fragments of DNA in a targeted and more efficient way.

LASSO probes can do just this, capturing DNA targets of more than 1,000 base pairs in length where the current format captures about 100 base pairs.

The team also reported the capture and cloning of the first protein library, or suite of proteins, from a human microbiome sample. Shedding light on the human microbiome at a molecular level is a first step toward improving precision medicine efforts that affect the microbial communities that colonize our gut, skin, and lungs, Parekkadan adds. Precision medicine requires a deep and functional understanding, at a molecular level, of the drivers of healthy and disease-forming microbiota.

Today, the pharmaceutical industry screens synthetic chemical libraries of thousands of molecules to find one that may have a medicinal effect, says Parekkadan.

Our vision is to apply the same approach but rapidly screen non-synthetic, biological, or natural molecules cloned from human or other genomes, including those of plants, animals, and microbes, he says. This could transform pharmaceutical drug discovery into biopharmaceutical drug discovery with much more effort.

The next phase, which is underway, is to improve the cloning process, build libraries, and discover therapeutic proteins found in our genomes, Parekkadan says.

Additional authors are from Harvard Medical School; the University of Trento in Trento, Italy; and Johns Hopkins University.

Source: Rutgers University

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What we can learn about global flu evolution from one person’s infection – Medical Xpress

Posted: at 6:20 am

June 27, 2017 A new study using 10-year-old samples finds parallels between individual and global flu evolution patterns. Credit: Kim Carney / Fred Hutch News Service

A new study has found that flu evolution within some individuals can hint at the virus's eventual evolutionary course worldwide.

Samples taken more than 10 years ago from people with unusually long flu infectionsand analyzed recently using modern genome sequencing methodsrevealed certain viral changes that matched global flu evolution trends several years later.

The study, published in the journal eLife, tracked how flu evolved over time in four people who were especially vulnerable to unusually severe viral infections: bone marrow transplant patients. For people with healthy immune systems, a typical flu infection lasts about a week, said Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center evolutionary biologist and doctoral student Katherine Xue, first author on the study. So she and her colleagues at the Hutch, Seattle Children's Research Institute and the University of Washington studied viruses that originated from patients who received transplants and developed severe flu infections that lasted two or more months.

These four patients were drawn from a group of nearly 500 transplant recipients who participated in a previous study led by Fred Hutch infectious disease researcher Dr. Michael Boeckh, also a co-author on Tuesday's study. That large study began in 2005 to improve understanding about the sometimes devastating impact of respiratory viruses in this vulnerable populationin fact, two of the four patients whose samples were analyzed in the current study went on to die of their infections.

Knowing what the flu virus does in a single infected person is important, Xue said, but it's difficult to study because the typical flu infection is so short. Most research tracks how the virus changes on a global rather than on an individual level.

"We know that flu changes really quickly, from year to year," said Xue, who is also a student in the University of Washington's genome sciences department. "All that evolution has to start somewhere. It has to start with individual mutations that arise within people while they're sick."

The flu's limited evolutionary options

The flu virus's rapid evolution is the reason we need a new flu vaccine every year. Through infections or vaccination, our immune systems build up cellular memories of past flu encounters, driving the virus to mutate so it can get around that immune blockade to continue infecting the same people year after year, said Fred Hutch evolutionary biologist and senior author on the paper Dr. Jesse Bloom.

But the virus is limited in its evolutionary potential. Mutations happen at random, and most that crop up will break or weaken the virus; only a handful of those changes allow the flu to slip past well-armed immune systems.

The researchers used a modern genetic sequencing technique, known as deep sequencing, to capture the complete genetic information from the thousands of different viral particles contained in a single patient's sample. They then followed the viruses as they changed from week to week during the patients' long infections. Some viral mutations petered out, but some "fixed" in each patient, meaning strains carrying that mutation eventually took over the entire population of viruses in that person's body. When a mutation fixes, that ensures the next person infected will also get that particular flu strain.

When they first started their analysis, they weren't expecting to find similarities between the four patients, Xue said. Their study had a more general aim: to understand how the flu evolves in an individual person. But they were surprised to find that some of the same mutations fixed in more than one patient. And they knew from other teams' research studying the global evolution of flu that some of those mutations would go on to take over the worldwide population as well, years after the strains had fixed in the cancer patients.

That doesn't mean that the same viral strains that later swept the world got their start in these few patients, Bloom said. Rather, it points to the few evolutionary paths available to get around people's immune systems.

"The viruses keep hitting on a relatively small number of solutions to this problem they face," Bloom said. "Mutations that [eventually] spread around the world come up over and over."

What would it take to build a flu forecast?

The researchers think the cancer patients' flu evolution predated the virus's global changes by so many years in part because these four people had such long infections. With a standard, weeklong infection, the virus has less of a chance to evolve because only a few hundred viruses out of the millions present in one person's body are transmitted to the next infected person, Xue said.

Those short infections and that transmission bottleneck lead to a "stop and start process of evolution," she said. In effect, the virus's evolution may be accelerated in patients with longer infections.

But it's also possible that favorable viral mutations appear in individual people years before they are able to take over the entire world's population of viruses. And that possibility hints that individual infections could, one day, be used to forecast flu's global evolution.

Predicting the mutations that take over the world would improve vaccine design, Xue said. Currently, researchers associated with the World Health Organization pick flu strains to include in each year's vaccine about 9 months before the next flu season starts, allowing sufficient time for vaccine production. It's a sophisticated and well-researched process, but it doesn't always capture the correct strains for a given flu season. Methods to better predict which viral strains will dominate each year could result in more effective vaccines.

The research team's next step is to understand whether they can see these early hints of global viral evolution in people with average-length infections. That will take a lot more than just four infections, Xue said. But the data is already out there, ready to be analyzed. Through the WHO's monitoring efforts, thousands of flu samples are taken around the world every year, and, increasingly, those samples are analyzed with the same deep sequencing methods that would allow such detailed analyses.

A unique group of four

The samples used in the study don't reflect the typical flu infectionbut they do underscore the importance of better understanding the virus. Influenza can be deadly for transplant patients. Because their immune systems can take up to a year to rebound after the procedure, those who undergo transplants are especially susceptible to easily transmittedand often mildinfections like the common cold and flu.

Normally, doctors do not bother tracking and analyzing colds and flu in healthy people. But at Fred Hutch's clinical care partner Seattle Cancer Care Alliance and many other cancer centers, patients who come down with a respiratory virus are followed very carefully because of the danger these infections pose. Colds and flu can lead to pneumonia and even death in many transplant patients.

In the original study, the patient volunteers, who all received transplants at SCCA, donated weekly swabs from their nose and mouth for as long as their infections lasted. With the volunteers' consent, extra material from those samples was stored in Fred Hutch freezersin case it could be useful for future research.

"We're incredibly grateful that these people who are undergoing really difficult treatments are still willing to participate in studies," Xue said. "The original study was conducted 10 years ago, and now that we have new methods, some of these original samples are bearing fruit in a way that we could never have imagined."

Dr. Steven Pergam, co-author on the study and a Fred Hutch infectious disease researcher and director of Infection Prevention at SCCA, also highlighted the patients' contributions to this study. Understanding how the virus affects this small group has led to knowledge that could impact anyone at risk from the flu, he said.

"These patients who are contributing samples are most at risk for complications from the flu," Pergam said. "It's a real testament to the patients who are willing to do this kind of research."

Next up, Xue and Bloom are interested in understanding how patients' immune systems change in response to an evolving virus. They would be able to pursue that approach using blood samples donated by the same patients whose viral samples they studied.

Such research could lay the groundwork for better treatment options for his patients at the SCCA, Pergam said.

"We need new treatments; we need better options for therapy; we need better vaccines to prevent patients from developing flu," he said. "This basic science work is incredibly valuable."

Explore further: Common cold can be surprisingly dangerous for transplant patients

More information: Katherine S Xue et al. Parallel evolution of influenza across multiple spatiotemporal scales, eLife (2017). DOI: 10.7554/eLife.26875

Angela P. Campbell et al. Clinical Outcomes Associated With Respiratory Virus Detection Before Allogeneic Hematopoietic Stem Cell Transplant, Clinical Infectious Diseases (2015). DOI: 10.1093/cid/civ272

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Serena Williams’s Style Evolution: From Tennis Phenom to Fashion Insider – Vanity Fair

Posted: at 6:20 am


Vanity Fair
Serena Williams's Style Evolution: From Tennis Phenom to Fashion Insider
Vanity Fair
Serena Williams is one of the greatest athletes to ever hit a tennis court, and she's also steadily become a formidable force in fashion, both on and off the court. The Vanity Fair cover star is a front row mainstay at fashion shows all over the world ...
'But Seriously,' Tennis Great John McEnroe Says He's Seeking 'Inner Peace'NPR

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PETYA Darwinism applied to cyberspace – CSO Online

Posted: at 6:19 am

By John Bryk, CSO | Jun 27, 2017 11:27 AM PT

Opinions expressed by ICN authors are their own.

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On the morning ofJune 27th, reports began surfacing of widespread attacks against Ukrainian critical infrastructure sectors that included aviation, banking, and electricity. An unknown malware had begun affecting IT systems in these sectors. Business systems were made unavailable and normal processes stopped. Fortunately, no operational technology, the technology that runs the energy grid, was reported to be affected.

Affected systems were widespread. They included Ukrenergo, the countrys electric transmission company, and Kyivenergo, the distribution company serving the Kiev region, While Ukrenergy reported no outages, Kyivenergy was forced to shut down all administratve systems, awaiting permission from the Ukraines Security Service (SBU) before restarting.

Others victims in Ukraine and internationally included:

The attack occurred, probably not by chance, only hours after the car bombing murder of Col. Maxim Shapoval of the Ukraine Chief Directorate of Intelligence and a day before Ukraines Constitution Day.

The offending malware was soon identified at PETYA, PETRYA, or PETwrap, depending upon the source. PETYA reportedly utilized the the NSAs leaked EternalBlue, the same Windows SMBv1 vulnerability as WannaCry, PETYA does not initially encrypt individual files, but replaces the master boot record (MBR), leaving the entire system unusable. Should the MBR not be available, it then goes on to encrypt the individual files.

Perhaps the most valuable lesson we can learn from this attack is that Charles Darwin was right. It's survival of the fittest; right along with that goes the smartest. Unless some completely new vector is discovered in action with this new threat, victims of PETYA have no excuse. The SMB vulnerability in question had been patched by Microsoft prior to WannaCry's May outbreak. During the WannaCry outbreak, Microsoft provided additional patches for legacy operating systems, those no longer supported by normal updates, like Windows XP and Server 2003. Even with these extraordinary measures to provide users with the protection they needed, some failed to update and/or patch.

Those who failed to take action and install patches handed to them on a silver platter are now victims of PETYA, and themselves sources of the new infection to others. Akin to a neighbor with a garage full of dynamite, this is the kind of negligence that endangers the entire cyber neighborhood.

Information Sharing and Analysis Centers (ISACs) in the U.S. were able to get ahead of the infection thanks to early warning and quick action. The Downstream Natural Gas and Electric ISACS combined forces to collect, analyze, and alert their sector members, providing early indicators and even links to algorithms successfully used to earlier decrypt the PETYA ransomware. Having just recently experienced the WannaCry worm, their members were patched and defended. There were no reports of infection in electric or downstream natural gas sectors.

This article is published as part of the IDG Contributor Network. Want to Join?

John Bryk retired from the U.S. Air Force as a colonel after a 30-year career, last serving as a military diplomat in central and western Europe and later as a civilian with the Defense Intelligence Agency. As the intelligence analyst for the DNG-ISAC, he focuses on the protection of our nation's natural gas critical cyber infrastructure.

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