Microsoft addressed a network misconfiguration that misdirected email traffic intended for the "example.com" test domain to Sumitomo Electric in Japan, potentially exposing test account data, according to multiple news sources. The issue stemmed from Microsoft's autodiscover service, routing email traffic from Azure and other Microsoft networks to sei.co.jp subdomains, Ars Technica reported.
In other tech news, security concerns surrounding Model Context Protocol (MCP) persisted due to the lack of mandatory authentication at its launch. VentureBeat reported that Pynt's research indicated a 92% probability of exploitation when deploying just 10 MCP plug-ins. Merritt Baer, chief security officer at Enkrypt AI, warned in October that "MCP is shipping with the same mistake we've seen in every major protocol rollout: insecure defaults. If we don't build authentication and least privilege in from day one, we'll be cleaning up breaches for the next decade."
Meanwhile, OpenAI engineer Michael Bolin released a technical breakdown of Codex, OpenAI's AI coding agent, revealing its internal workings and design philosophy, Ars Technica reported. Bolin's post highlighted the limitations of AI coding tools like Codex and Claude Code, noting that while they accelerate development, they require human oversight to overcome brittleness and debugging challenges.
A study published on Phys.org found that people are swayed by AI-generated videos even when they know they are fake. Generative deep learning models are AI systems that can create texts, images, audio files, and videos for specific purposes, according to the report.
In India, proposals by the Indian supreme court to relocate street dogs in Delhi and ban citizens from feeding them, except in approved areas, have sparked intense debate, Nature News reported. The proposals followed concerns about the approximately 20,000 people in India who die each year from rabies after being bitten by street dogs. The measures are likely to be ineffective, given that the dogs often find their food at waste points and feeding stations, according to Nature News.
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