Weather forecast Germany summer resorts and the biggest cities.

Tomorrow 05/27/2017

Berlin
25/13°C
Hanover
26/16°C
Hamburg
26/16°C
Leipzig
25/14°C
Munich
23/9°C
Duisburg
29/19°C
Cologne
28/17°C
Nuremberg
25/12°C
Frankfurt am Main
27/14°C
Dresden
24/14°C
Essen
28/20°C
Bochum
28/20°C
Stuttgart
26/13°C
Wuppertal
27/19°C
Dortmund
28/20°C
Bonn
28/18°C
Dusseldorf
28/18°C
Mannheim
28/16°C
Bremen
26/16°C
Karlsruhe
28/17°C



A newly discovered software flaw has prompted fears of another cyberattack in the style of the WannaCry ransomware that hit the NHS and other organisations across the world.
The vulnerability in popular networking software Samba could potentially affect hundreds of thousands of devices.
It leaves those devices exposed to attackers who could potentially remotely upload and execute code to take control of affected computers.
The US Department of Homeland Security announced the vulnerability and encouraged system administrators to apply a patch released by Samba.
In April, a group calling itself the Shadow Brokers leaked a software exploit named EternalBlue which was then used by WannaCry to infect NHS computers, for which a patch was available a month prior.
System administrators needed to apply the patch, however, and this did not happen in many NHS trusts.

Apple to scan iPhones for child sex abuse images

  Apple has announced details of a system to find child sexual abuse material (CSAM) on customers' devices. Before an image is stored on...