Tag: incident
I’m a gym girl – I have proof no-one cares what you look like after an embarrassing incident
A GYM girl has shared an embarrassing incident during a workout.
She joked that it proved that you can rest assured no one’s looking at you at the gym.
Tasha, a gym girl, shared her accident that she caught on video[/caption]
Tasha (@tashabraziliano) shared the accident that she caught on video with over 370,000 TikTok followers.
She performed Bulgarian squats on a bench with some weights in workout clothes.
“Behold, evidence that no one cares about what you’re doing in the gym,” she said.
Before she knew it, the gym girl found herself overcommitting to the workout and falling over in a big crash.
She moaned as she clutched her side before finally getting up with a huff.
“As if Bulgarians weren’t painful enough,” she joked, adding the hashtags #gymfail and #gymhumor.
People took to the comments to share their condolences and their own personal experiences.
“I literally fainted, fell on the floor,” said one commenter.
“And got up who knows how many minutes later and I don’t think anyone noticed.”
“Didn’t lock the leg press correctly, so it smacked against my head, got a concussion but no embarrassment since no one reacted,” said another.
“I fell on a treadmill and got back on like nothing happened,” said a third.
“No fr. I dropped a 50lb weight on my toe and freaked out and everyone was just like lifting,” said a fourth.
The fitness influencer fell over attempting to perform some Bulgarian squats[/caption]
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Twitter says a ‘security incident’ led to private Circle tweets becoming public
Back in April, users found a bug with Twitter’s Circle feature that saw the platform expose private tweets to strangers. Now, nearly a month later, the company has finally commented on the issue. In an email seen by The Guardian, Twitter told affected users the exposure was the result of “a security incident that occured earlier this year.”
The company claims the issue was “immediately fixed.” It also shared an apology. “Twitter is committed to protecting the privacy of the people who use our service, and we understand the risks that an incident like this can introduce and we deeply regret this happened,” the company said. When news of the exposure first started circulating online, some, including creator Theo Brown, speculated the issue was the result of Twitter failing to filter Circle tweets out of its recommendation algorithm. Twitter has not operated a communications department since Elon Musk’s first round of layoffs, and the company did not initially acknowledge the issue.
More broadly, Twitter has dealt with a growing number of technical issues since Musk’s takeover of the company in October. The billionaire has reduced the company’s workforce by at least 60 percent, gutting many of its technical teams of senior leadership. Over that time, Twitter has suffered multiple outages and otherwise created confusion over feature rollouts and removals.
This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/twitter-says-a-security-incident-led-to-private-circle-tweets-becoming-public-164954799.html?src=rss
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Capita, Company Providing UK’s Nuclear Submarine Training, Says It’s Successfully Contained ‘Cyber Incident’
In an update on Monday about the incident sent to the Regulatory News Service, the company confirmed it “experienced a cyber incident primarily impacting access to internal Microsoft Office 365 applications.” The nature of the incident has not been disclosed. While financially motivated ransomware attacks remain a prevalent threat for organizations in Britain, Capita also provides services to the British government that may be of interest to state-sponsored espionage groups.
Capita’s numerous contracts include several with the Ministry of Defence. Last year, a consortium it leads took control over engineering and maintenance support of training simulators for the Royal Navy’s nuclear-powered ballistic missile submarines used as part of the U.K.’s nuclear deterrent. In its statement, Capita said: “Immediate steps were taken to successfully isolate and contain the issue,” which was “limited to parts of the Capita network.”
Read more of this story at Slashdot.