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Microsoft Teams stores cleartext auth tokens, won’t be quickly patched

Enlarge / Using Teams in a browser is actually safer than using Microsoft’s desktop apps, which are wrapped around a browser. It’s a lot to work through.

Microsoft’s Teams client stores users’ authentication tokens in an unprotected text format, potentially allowing attackers with local access to post messages and move laterally through an organization, even with two-factor authentication enabled, according to a cybersecurity company.

Vectra recommends avoiding Microsoft’s desktop client, built with the Electron framework for creating apps from browser technologies, until Microsoft has patched the flaw. Using the web-based Teams client inside a browser like Microsoft Edge is, somewhat paradoxically, more secure, Vectra claims. The reported issue affects Windows, Mac, and Linux users.

Microsoft, for its part, believes Vectra’s exploit “does not meet our bar for immediate servicing” since it would require other vulnerabilities to get inside the network in the first place. A spokesperson told Dark Reading that the company will “consider addressing (the issue) in a future product release.”

Researchers at Vectra discovered the vulnerability while helping a customer trying to remove a disabled account from their Teams setup. Microsoft requires users to be logged in to be removed, so Vectra looked into local account configuration data. They set out to remove references to the logged-in account. What they found instead, by searching the user’s name in the app’s files, were tokens, in the clear, providing Skype and Outlook access. Each token they found was active and could grant access without triggering a two-factor challenge.

Going further, they crafted a proof-of-concept exploit. Their version downloads an SQLite engine to a local folder, uses it to scan a Teams app’s local storage for an auth token, then sends the user a high-priority message with their own token text. The potential consequences of this exploit are greater than phishing some users with their own tokens, of course:

Anyone who installs and uses the Microsoft Teams client in this state is storing the credentials needed to perform any action possible through the Teams UI, even when Teams is shut down. This enables attackers to modify SharePoint files, Outlook mail and calendars, and Teams chat files. Even more damaging, attackers can tamper with legitimate communications within an organization by selectively destroying, exfiltrating, or engaging in targeted phishing attacks. There is no limit to an attacker’s ability to move through your company’s environment at this point.

Vectra notes that moving through a user’s Teams access presents a particularly rich well for phishing attacks, as malicious actors can pose as CEOs or other executives and seek actions and clicks from lower-level employees. It’s a strategy known as Business Email Compromise (BEC); you can read about it on Microsoft’s On the Issues blog.

Electron apps have been found to harbor deep security issues before. A 2019 presentation showed how browser vulnerabilities could be used to inject code into Skype, Slack, WhatsApp, and other Electron apps. WhatsApp’s desktop Electron app was found to have another vulnerability in 2020, providing local file access through JavaScript embedded into messages.

We’ve reached out to Microsoft for comment and will update this post if we receive a response.

Vectra recommends that developers, if they “must use Electron for your application,” securely store OAuth tokens using tools such as KeyTar. Connor Peoples, security architect at Vectra, told Dark Reading that he believes Microsoft is moving away from Electron and shifting toward Progressive Web Apps, which would provide better OS-level security around cookies and storage.

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Prince Archie and Princess Lilibet Won’t Be HRHs and Meghan and Harry Are Reportedly Furious.

In what is perhaps the ultimate in first-world problems, King Charles is not expected to bestow an HRH honorific on Harry and Meghan Markle’s kids, but they will become prince and princess, it has been reported.

The Sun reports that the new arrangements, which will formalize the names of Prince Archie and Princess Lilibet, are expected to be confirmed over the coming weeks.

According to a custom begun in 1917, the grandchildren of the king are given prince or princess titles. Great-grandchildren are not, but an exception is made for the grandchildren of the heir to the throne, which is why the Cambridge kids are known as Prince George, Princess Charlotte, and Prince Louis.

It’s why students of the unwritten British convention have declared that Meghan was wrong when she said in her interview with Oprah Winfrey that her children were denied a title unfairly.

However if they were not to be given the titles now that their grandfather is king, she would be proved quite right. And maybe, her supporters will say, this is what she meant all along.

There is no doubt that under the 1917 rules, their children should automatically become HRHs.

Equally, there is little denying that it would be very odd if Archie and Lilibet were publicly using the HRH title when their parents have been asked not to do so, and have agreed to that request.

King Charles’ office declined to comment on the report to The Daily Beast. The Sussexes’ office has been contacted for comment.

However the Sun says that the decision to not create Archie and Lilibet as His or Her Royal Highnesses (HRHs) has angered the children’s parents.

The Sun quotes a source as saying: “Harry and Meghan were worried about the security issue and being prince and princess brings them the right to have certain levels of royal security. There have been a lot of talks over the past week. They have been insistent that Archie and Lilibet are prince and princess. They have been relentless since the queen died. But they have been left furious that Archie and Lilibet cannot take the title HRH. That is the agreement—they can be prince and princess but not HRH because they are not working royals.”

There are plenty of other non-working royals who are HRHs, of course. Prince Andrew’s daughters Beatrice and Eugenie spring to mind.

If the palace wants to now change the rules, going forward, to restrict the issuing of HRHs to “working royals” as opposed to grandchildren of the monarch, it is of course its right to do so. But that will represent a significant shift.

And the only people to lose out (at least until Louis and Charlotte have kids) will be Harry’s children.

Not a great look.

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To extend offensive, Ukraine demands tanks but says Germany won’t help

KYIV, Ukraine — Ukraine’s ability to expel Russian forces from its country as soon as possible now depends largely on Germany and its willingness to send desperately needed armor, a senior adviser to President Volodymyr Zelensky said Tuesday.

But Germany is balking, causing deep frustration in Kyiv. It is an echo of the earliest days of the invasion, when Berlin was derided for offering helmets when Ukraine needed heavy weapons.

“Germany needs to understand that the timeline for the end of the war is dependent on its position,” Mykhailo Podolyak, a top adviser to Zelensky, told The Washington Post in an interview on Tuesday.

A sweeping counteroffensive in the northeastern Kharkiv region has forced Russian soldiers into a hasty retreat and returned more than 1,100 square miles to Ukrainian control, a potential turning point more than six months into the war.

Kyiv believes the requested heavy armor — including battle tanks and personnel carriers — could help shift that turning point into a tipping point. Ukrainian officials are now urging their Western partners to provide them with more weapons immediately.

“The faster we receive this or that weapon from Germany, the faster Germany finally breaks this feeling of closeness with Russia, the faster the war will end,” Podolyak said. He said that Ukraine is specifically asking for armored personnel vehicles and tanks to be able to support its battlefield momentum.

But Germany, so far, has been unwilling to grant the request. The German government did not respond to a request for comment on Tuesday night, but has emphasized it is coordinating its response with allies.

“No country has delivered Western-built infantry fighting vehicles or main battle tanks so far,” German Defense Minister Christine Lambrecht said in an event in Berlin this week. “We have agreed with our partners that Germany will not take such action unilaterally.”

Russian troops in big retreat as Ukraine offensive advances in Kharkiv

In a Monday news conference with visiting Israeli Prime Minister Yair Lapid, Chancellor Olaf Scholz listed what he called “extensive” German weaponry already supplied, saying it had been crucial in the success of the counteroffensive.

Virtually no outside nations have provided tanks to Ukraine, instead sending aging models such as the M113, an armored personnel carrier with tracks that was first fielded by the United States in the 1960s. Denmark provided 54 M113s that were upgraded by Germany and then sent to Ukraine, according to the German defense ministry.

Poland and the Czech Republic have sent a few hundred Soviet-era T-72 tanks to Ukraine, with Germany promising to backfill their supplies. There is little doubt now that Ukraine could make use of more modern equipment, even if it would require further training.

On Monday, a senior U.S. defense official, speaking on the condition of anonymity under ground rules set by the Pentagon, said that the Ukrainians have shown in their counteroffensive that they are “quite effective” while using armored vehicles.

“So clearly, that kind of capability is important,” the defense official said, adding that the United States does not have any “specific plans about a specific capability at this point.”

Since the first days of Russia’s military offensive, Germany has been accused of dragging its feet on arms deliveries to Kyiv. Initially, as Russian troops massed on Ukraine’s borders, Berlin said its unique world war history, and long-standing policy, meant it could not send weapons.

Days after Russian President Vladimir Putin’s invasion, as part of what was seen as a sea-change in the country’s defense policy, Germany said it would send arms. But the government, led by Scholz, a social democrat, has still agonized over sending heavier weapons, and since then has been criticized for the speed and scope of deliveries.

Under public and political pressure, Berlin in April announced that it had approved shipping German-made self-propelled antiaircraft guns to Ukraine, with 24 sent so far. But it has resisted calls to send tanks, including the German-made Leopard 2.

According to German media reports, the manufacturer has 100 ready to send.

During a visit to Kyiv on Saturday, German Foreign Minister Annalena Baerbock told the Yalta European Strategy conference that Germany is “150 percent at the side of Ukraine and the people of Ukraine.”

But in a joint news conference with her Ukrainian counterpart, Dmytro Kuleba, Baerbock did not commit to supplying the equipment that Kyiv has been requesting. “As the situation on the ground changes, we are reexamining our support and will discuss further steps,” she said.

In a tweet on Tuesday, Kuleba echoed Podolyak, adding that Ukraine was also hoping for Marder infantry fighting vehicles. The Leopard is a tank operated by numerous NATO allies, including Canada, Poland and Turkey, while the Marder is an armored vehicle with tracks that carries infantrymen and does not have a large-caliber “main gun.”

“Disappointing signals from Germany while Ukraine needs Leopards and Marders now — to liberate people and save them from genocide,” Kuleba wrote. “Not a single rational argument on why these weapons cannot be supplied, only abstract fears and excuses. What is Berlin afraid of that Kyiv is not?”

Putin, tone deaf and isolated, pursues war ‘goals’ and refuses to lose

Scholz’s center-left Social Democrats have historically espoused a policy of detente toward Russia, while the chancellor himself is known for an extremely cautious public style.

His government has voiced various arguments for resisting pressure to expand arms deliveries — from not wanting to trigger World War III, to saying Ukrainian troops would need training in order to operate modern weaponry. But often the statements have been contradictory.

Germany had initially said it could not spare any of its Marder infantry fighting vehicles, but later pursued a deal to send them to Slovenia so the eastern European country could send its own Soviet-era tanks onto Ukraine. Berlin entered into a similar arrangement with Poland and the Czech Republic, a swap system meant to get tanks to Ukrainian forces more quickly, but those efforts have largely stalled.

Scholz says he is carefully coordinating deliveries with western partners. And in a 90-minute call with Putin on Tuesday, Scholz said he stressed that Russia must withdraw its troops and respect Ukraine’s territorial sovereignty. But even among NATO allies there appears to be some frustration with Berlin.

In an interview with German television station ZDF on Monday, U.S. Ambassador to Germany Amy Gutmann said she welcomed Germany’s efforts in support of Ukraine but “my expectations are even higher.”

The war in Ukraine has posed a challenge to Germany’s standing in Europe.

In the early days of the war, Germany, long dependent on Russian fossil fuel, was a notable sanctions holdout, particularly on energy. The Baltic nations and Poland called for a full and immediate energy embargo. Germany and others opposed the idea, arguing it would hurt Europe more than the Kremlin.

Though evidence of Russian atrocities in Bucha helped get Germany and the rest of the bloc to phase out most oil imports from Russia, frustration with Berlin has lingered, particularly in Ukraine and among central and eastern European states.

In April, Zelensky rebuffed the offer of a visit from German President Frank-Walter Steinmeier, who has a complicated history with Ukraine because of his role in the failed Minsk peace accords.

In a recent interview with Der Spiegel, Polish Prime Minister Mateusz Morawiecki called out German energy policy and said that on Ukraine, “Berlin’s hesitation, its inaction, seriously calls into question the value of the alliance with Germany.”

“And we are not the only ones saying that,” he continued. “I am hearing this from quite a few other heads of government in Europe as well.”

Ukraine’s current pressure campaign on Germany comes after the latest meeting of the Ukraine Defense Contact Group, a coalition of dozens of nations organized by the Pentagon. Ukrainian officials, including Defense Minister Oleksii Reznikov, attended and briefed the group, according to Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin.

Ukrainian offensive thwarted Russia’s annexation plans in Kharkiv

Germany has defended its record and called attention to its financial and military assistance to Ukraine. In diplomatic and policy circles, however, there is still much talk of Germany’s fading leadership within the European Union and in European security more broadly.

The question now is whether Ukraine’s most recent offensive will change Berlin’s calculus, spurring another major foreign policy shift.

“I understand that there is still a certain conservative thinking, there are certain fears, and there is a certain regret about the missed opportunities in the energy sector with the Russian Federation,” Podolyak said. “We all understand this, but there will be no return to the past. And now, in my opinion, is coming a critical moment for Germany when it is necessary to express its real position, the position of the European leader.”

Morris reported from Berlin, Rauhala from Brussels and Lamothe from Washington. Karen DeYoung in Washington contributed to this report.



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Cyberpunk 2077: Phantom Liberty Is the First Expansion, Won’t Be on Last-Gen Consoles

CD Projekt Red has announced that Cyberpunk 2077’s first major expansion is called Phantom Liberty and will only be released for PlayStation 5, Xbox Series, PC, and Stadia.

Announced during its Night City Wire livestream the expansion marks the first major addition of new content to Cyberpunk 2077 outside of its various patches that fixed the game following its disastrous launch on consoles.

A short teaser trailer (above) was also released, reiterating the 2023 release date that CD Projekt Red had previously announced and also sharing a handful of story details. Keanu Reeves will return as Johnny Silverhand in the expansion, and the trailer sees him warn V about an oath they just took, swearing allegiance to the New United States of America.

“We’re having a lot of fun with [the expansion],” said game director Gabriel Amatengelo. “It’s a new style of plot, a new cast of characters, [and will expand] on a district in Night City where it primarily takes place.”

This wasn’t the only Cyberpunk news to come out of CD Projekt Red’s livestream, however, as the developer also announced more DLC for the game that will be released today, September 6.

Cyberpunk 2077: Phantom Liberty Expansion Screenshots

This new content is tied into the Cyberpunk Edgerunners anime series that will be released on Netflix next week, and features a handful of new cosmetics and even a new quest that takes place alongside the main Cyberpunk 2077 story.

It also acts as Patch 1.6 and, just as the Phantom Liberty expansion is moving away from the previous PlayStation 4 and Xbox One generation, this will also be the final major update coming to those consoles.

Ryan Dinsdale is an IGN freelancer. He’ll talk about The Witcher all day.

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NFL Week 1 early inactives: Marcus Peters won’t play for Ravens

Getty Images

Every week we bring you all the inactives from the 1 p.m. ET games in one post, constantly updated with the latest information.

Ravens cornerback Marcus Peters won’t be making his return to the lineup on Sunday. Peters is on the team’s inactive list for their game against the Jets.

Peters missed all of last season with a torn ACL and was listed as questionable on Friday’s injury report, but reports from Sunday’s game had him doing a heavy workout that made it unlikely that he’d be playing later in the day.

The Ravens also listed running back J.K. Dobbins as questionable in his return from a torn ACL. Dobbins is also inactive and left tackle Ronnie Stanley will not play, so the 2021 injury parade continues to impact the team.

Ravens at Jets

Ravens: T Ronnie Stanley, RB J.K. Dobbins, DT Travis Jones, CB Marcus Peters, T Daniel Faalele, TE Nick Boyle

Jets: QB Zach Wilson, TE Jeremy Ruckert, WR Denzel Mims, DL Bryce Huff, OL Conor McDermott

Colts at Texans

Colts: LB Shaquille Leonard, QBSam Ehlinger, CB Dallis Flowers, C Wesley French, WR Dezmon Patton, T Luke Tenuta

Texans: QB Kyle Allen, WR Tyler Johnson, DL Rasheem Green, LB Garret Wallow, LB Jake Hansen, DL Thomas Booker, DL Austin Deculus

49ers at Bears

49ers: G Daniel Brunskill, TE George Kittle, QB Brock Purdy, OL Nick Zakelj, RB Tyrion Davis-Price, WR Danny Gray, DL Jordan Willis

Bears: WR Velus Jones Jr., S Elijah Hicks, OL Ja’Tyre Carter, OL Alex Leatherwood, DL Kingsley Jonathan, and TE Trevon Wesco.

Steelers at Bengals

Steelers: QB Mason Rudolph, OL Kendrick Green, WR Steven Sims, DE Isaiahh Loudermilk, LB Mark Robinson

Bengals: TE Devin Asiasi, HB Trayveon Williams, OT D’Ante Smith, G Max Scharping, DT Jay Tufele

Browns at Panthers

Browns: QB Kellen Mond, WR Michael Woods II, RB D’Ernest Johnson, S Richard LeCounte III, DE Isaiah Thomas, T Chris Hubbard, T Jack Conklin

Panthers: WR Laviska Shenault, DE Amare’ Barno, OL Cade Mays, DT Marquan McCall, TE Stephen Sullivan, LB Arron Mosby

Jaguars at Commanders

Jaguars: WR Kendric Pryor, S Daniel Thomas, RB Snoop Conner, CB Montaric Brown, LB De’Shaan Dixon

Commanders: S Kam Curl, QB Sam Howell, CB Tariq Castro-Fields, G Chris Paul, TE Cole Turner

Eagles at Lions

Eagles: QB Ian Book, S Reed Blankenship, RB Trey Sermon, TE Grant Calcaterra, DE Tarron Jackson, OL Josh Sills

Lions: G Tommy Kraemer, LB Julian Okwara, S Ifeatu Melifonwu, CB Chase Lucas, TE James Mitchell, DT Demetrius Taylor

Saints at Falcons

Saints: TE Nick Vannett, WR Tre’Quan Smith, RB Dwayne Washington, CB Paulson Adebo, DE Tanoh Kpassagnon, G Wyatt Davis

Falcons: WR Damiere Byrd, RB Tyler Allgeier, LB DeAngelo Malone, LB Nick Kwiatkoski, OL Chuma Edoga

Patriots at Dolphins

Patriots: QB Bailey Zappe, DB Joshuah Bledsoe, CB Shaun Wade, RB Pierre Strong, OL Anfernee Jennings, G Chasen Hines, DT Sam Roberts

Dolphins: CB Noah Igbinoghene, RB Salvon Ahmed, WR Erik Ezukanma, TE Tanner Conner, QB Skylar Thompson, LB Trey Flowers, S Eric Rowe

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All the iOS 16 Features You Won’t Get Until Later This Year

There are usually multiple features that Apple is not able to finish before the first official release of a major new version of iOS, and this year looks to be no different, with a total of nine iOS 16 features now confirmed to not be present in the first public version of the new OS.

Last year, SharePlay, Digital IDs in the Wallet app, and Universal Control were among a large number of features in iOS 15 and iPadOS 15 that were not available in their initial release, taking several months to trickle out to users.

Apple previewed each of the following features upon announcing ‌iOS 16‌ at WWDC earlier this year, but they will not be present in iOS 16.0 when it releases to the public tomorrow:

  • Live Activities: Follow activities happening in real-time like a sports match or a ride-share with just a glance at the Lock Screen. Third-party apps and App Clips can implement support thanks to the Live Activities API.
  • Game Center SharePlay support: Games that use Game Center multiplayer support have SharePlay integration. You can start playing automatically with friends on a FaceTime call.
  • Game Center Contacts integration: Contacts shows your friends’ Game Center profiles. Tap through to see what they are playing and achieving in games.
  • Support for Matter: The new smart home connectivity standard that enables compatible accessories to work together seamlessly and across platforms. Matter allows users to choose from even more compatible smart home accessories and control them with the Home app and Siri on Apple devices.
  • Updated architecture for the Home app: Enhancements to the underlying architecture of the Home app to enable faster, more reliable performance and improved efficiency, especially for homes with lots of accessories and multiple controller devices.
  • Freeform app: A new digital whiteboard app with a flexible canvas for diagramming projects, aggregating important assets, and brainstorming, with real-time collaboration features and rich multimedia support.
  • iCloud Shared Photo Library: A new option in the Photos app to allow users to create a shared photos library and invite anyone with an Apple ID to view, contribute to, and edit it, including favoriting images and adding captions. There are no limitations, and all participants have the same permissions, making it ideal for families.
  • Key sharing: The ability to securely share keys in Apple Wallet via messaging apps and Mail.
  • Easy Shortcuts setup for iPhone 8, ‌iPhone‌ 8 Plus, and ‌iPhone‌ X: ‌Siri‌ can run shortcuts from installed apps without any setup process (to be available for newer devices immediately without delay).

iCloud Shared Photo Library became the latest feature to be delayed following Apple’s “Far out” event earlier this week, but all of the other delays were known upon the initial preview of ‌iOS 16‌ at WWDC.

Apple says that all of these features are coming in an update to ‌iOS 16‌ later this year, but it has not yet offered a more specific timeframe for any of them. After months of beta testing, iOS 16.0 will become officially available for download on every compatible ‌iPhone‌ tomorrow. For a detailed breakdown of all of the new features in ‌iOS 16‌, see our comprehensive roundup.

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The iPhone 14 lineup won’t have physical SIM support

The new iPhone 14 lineup will ship without physical SIM trays — but only in the US. They’ll be able to use two eSIMs at once (and store more than that), but is the lack of a physical tray a big deal? And is it user-hostile and stupid?

First, a refresher on eSIMs: they’re SIM cards, but electronic, not physical. That means your phone can be provisioned remotely — no more going to a store to get a physical SIM. This makes it easier (in some ways) to switch networks or try one out — T-Mobile now uses eSIMs to let people test-drive its network for up to three months. As of iOS 16, you can even transfer your eSIM between iPhones via Bluetooth, which should make it almost as easy as a physical SIM — as long as you’re staying in the Apple ecosystem. Of course.

Most major US carriers, and many worldwide, have eSIM support, and iPhones have supported them since 2018, including the ability to use two SIMs at once. Up until the iPhone 13, that meant one eSIM and one physical SIM; the iPhone 13 family introduced the ability to use two eSIMs at the same time. Removing the physical SIM — and the hole in the case it requires — is the next logical step. At least for Apple, and at least in the US — the iPhone 14 still has a SIM tray everywhere else.

If you’re on a major US cell phone network — AT&T, Verizon, or T-Mobile — the lack of a physical SIM tray probably won’t impact you much. Even if you change carriers or change phones, you can download an eSIM directly from Verizon, AT&T, or T-Mobile without going to a store.

But if you are on a carrier that doesn’t have eSIM support or you’re planning to switch to one, well, you shouldn’t get the iPhone 14 right now. You might not have to wait too long; this could be the push smaller carriers need to get on board with eSIMs.

(Outside the US, the iPhone 14 lineup still includes nano-SIM slots.)

That’s no SIM slot; it’s a mmWave cutout

At the launch event, Apple spokespeople told The Verge that the iPhone 14 and 14 Pro can store at least eight eSIMS, with up to two active at once. Global eSIM reseller Airalo says previous iPhones could hold five to 10, depending on the model. This could take some of the sting out of the loss of the physical SIM tray, though not all international carriers support eSIMs. (I haven’t used Airalo and can’t vouch for them, but being able to remotely provision a local eSIM when traveling abroad could remove the hassle of finding a local SIM.)

The ability to have more than one active SIM is great for frequent travelers, people who live in areas where any one network has spotty coverage, or folks who have separate work and personal numbers. I bought my iPhone 11 when I lived in the Netherlands, and it has both a Dutch eSIM and a physical Verizon SIM. That meant I could use a local SIM whether I was in Europe or the US without losing access to my other number or having to mess with my iMessage or WhatsApp settings.

Physical SIMs make it easy to bring your phone to a different carrier or bring your number to a new phone. They’re ubiquitous, work on all phones, and are easy enough to use (though also easy to lose; ask me how I know). Many of my co-workers are not psyched about losing the SIM slot. Moving an eSIM from an iPhone to an Android phone isn’t necessarily trivial.

I don’t think removing the SIM tray is necessarily user-hostile for most people; most people just do not switch carriers or phones every few weeks. But that depends on how easy providers make it to install and migrate eSIMs across platforms. We’ll see how this plays out.

Update Sept 7th, 4:45PM ET: Added information on eSIM support.

Correction Sept 8th, 12:06PM ET: The original text of this article misspelled the name of eSIM retailer Airalo. We regret the error.

Correction Sept 10th, 9:26PM ET: An earlier version of this article stated the iPhone 14 can store up to six eSIMs; both the 14 and 14 Pro models can store at least eight.


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Tim Cook revealed the real reason Apple won’t add RCS to the iPhone

Last night, Tim Cook shot down the possibility of solving the green bubble problem — and he revealed the real reason why Apple won’t do it: it doesn’t sell iPhones.

At Vox Media’s Code conference, an attendee told Cook that it was difficult for him to send videos to his mom because Apple devices don’t support RCS, the texting protocol championed by Google and supported by major phone carriers. Cook, in response, suggested the attendee buy his mom an iPhone. “I don’t hear our users asking that we put a lot of energy in on that at this point,” Cook said.

This seems to be the first time Cook has publicly addressed RCS, the Rich Communications Services protocol. RCS is a major improvement over SMS and MMS, letting you do things like send higher-quality photos and videos, and it would fix many of the issues you run into when texting between Apple and Android devices. But Apple has so far refrained from offering support, and the distinction between iMessage’s blue bubbles and regular text message’s green ones has remained a thorn in Google’s side.

Apple has deliberately chosen to make a superior texting experience via iMessage an Apple-only thing — and Cook’s comments on Wednesday speak to that choice. For years, it’s been a key part of Apple’s strategy to lock in users to its platforms. Emails revealed as part of Epic Games v. Apple showed top execs like Craig Federighi (in 2013) and Phil Schiller (in 2016) making the case that bringing iMessage to Android wouldn’t benefit Apple. Eddy Cue testified in a deposition that Apple could have made an Android version of iMessage that was compatible with iOS, but that obviously hasn’t been publicly released.

By making iMessage an Apple-only product — and by continuing to improve it with features like the ability to edit and unsend messages — Apple can make the case that the best way to message your friends is on an Apple device using Apple’s messaging app. While the company could theoretically adopt RCS and keep iMessage on Apple devices, it benefits by creating as much separation as possible between text messaging across Apple and Android. That means more people will buy more iPhones.

Google has been campaigning hard in recent months for Apple to adopt RCS. Google has implemented it in Android, of course, and it’s also now supported by AT&T, T-Mobile, and Verizon (after a very slow rollout). And given that all three have committed to making Google’s Android messaging app the default texting for Android phones they sell, it’s much more likely that people will just text over RCS without thinking about it.

Google SVP Hiroshi Lockheimer has led the charge, joking that there’s a “Really Clear Solution” to messaging struggles and saying that Apple is “holding back” customers who text. The company also recently launched a website, “Get The Message,” to try shaming Apple into adopting RCS.

Lockheimer understands Apple’s resistance to RCS, “but people should be able to send high quality videos and photos to their mom without having to buy her a new phone,” he said. Cook, it seems, disagrees.



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Nio says Nvidia chip restrictions won’t hurt them

Chinese electric car company Nio said it doesn’t expect U.S. restrictions on Nvidia to affect the start-up’s business operations.

Vcg | Visual China Group | Getty Images

Li said Wednesday there are many companies in China with artificial intelligence training chips, and that Nio is evaluating opportunities to work with different companies.

But he said the U.S. restrictions would not affect Nio’s long-term strategy.

Last week, automaker Geely said it won’t be affected by the new restrictions, as did autonomous driving start-ups WeRide and Pony.ai.

Read more about electric vehicles from CNBC Pro

Earlier this week, Chinese financial news site Caixin reported that He Xiaopeng, chairman of electric car start-up Xpeng, said the restrictions would bring challenges for all autonomous driving algorithm training on cloud computing platforms.

But he said the company has bought enough of the high-tech products to meet demand for the coming years, according to the report. Caixin cited He’s post on a personal WeChat account, which is similar to a private Facebook news feed post.

Xpeng did not immediately respond to a CNBC request for comment.

— CNBC’s Arjun Kharpal contributed to this report.

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Vitamin D won’t protect you from Covid or respiratory infections, studies say

Vitamin D supplementation at either dose “did not result in reduced risk of all-cause acute respiratory infections (ARI), or in risk or severity of COVID-19 specifically,” said study author Dr. Adrian Martineau, a professor of respiratory infection and immunity at the Institute of Population Health Sciences at Queen Mary University of London via email.

A second double-blinded, randomized clinical trial, also done during the pandemic, gave over 34,000 Norwegians cod liver oil or a placebo to test the impact of vitamin D on Covid and respiratory disease prevention. Cod liver oil naturally contains low doses of vitamin D, along with vitamin A and omega-3 fatty acids.

The British Medical Journal released both studies Wednesday.

“The major takeaway is that for people in general, a vitamin D supplement did not prevent COVID-19, serious COVID-19 or symptomatic acute respiratory tract infections,” said study author Dr. Arne Søraas, a researcher in the department of microbiology at Oslo University Hospital in Norway, in an email.

Søraas added that the UK study design “complements ours in several ways, with a higher dose of vitamin D given to participants only after measuring their vitamin D status. Nevertheless, their result is supporting our findings and that is the key takeaway too: Neither study found any preventive effect after supplementation with vitamin D.”

The findings of both studies counter a study done in 2020 in Mexico City, where health professionals were given either 4,000 IU of vitamin D a day or a placebo. Researchers found protective effects from the vitamin in just one month. Two more clinical trials that are underway in the United States and Canada will add more data, Martineau said.

The studies were done before vaccinations were widely available, both authors noted. “We can be completely sure that vaccination is way more effective than vitamin D which probably does not prevent COVID-19 at all,” Søraas said.

Vitamin D’s popularity

The primary function of vitamin D is to help the body absorb calcium and phosphate, thus keeping muscles and teeth healthy and bones strong and less likely to break. However, vitamin D is also known to help the immune system fight off invading bacteria and viruses.

Research has shown that vitamin D deficiency impairs the immune system, and some studies have found vitamin D supplements may reduce the risk of respiratory virus infections and calm immune system overreaction.

During the early days of the pandemic, physicians on the front lines began noticing people with lower levels of vitamin D appeared to have a higher risk of dying from Covid-19. Suddenly, the internet was flooded with speculation that taking supplemental doses of vitamin D — even if not needed — would prevent the coronavirus from taking hold.

However, “unlike vitamin C, vitamin D is a fat-soluble vitamin that can ‘build up’ in the system and cause toxicity if taken at very high doses over long periods,” Martineau explained.

Research has suggested that long-term use of higher levels of vitamin D is associated with increases in all-cause mortality, greater risk of cancer, cardiovascular events and more falls and fractures among the elderly.

The recommended daily dose of vitamin D for people in the US between the ages of 1 and 70 is 600 international units (UI) a day, rising to 800 IU a day for those over 70. In the UK, the recommended daily amount is 400 IU a day. Levels in other parts of the world are country-specific to reflect environmental and dietary differences, but typically also range between 400 and 800 IU a day.

Studying people with low vitamin D levels

The UK study was part of COVIDENCE UK, a national study designed to investigate risk factors for developing Covid-19. Researchers enrolled 6,200 adults, age 16 or older, who were not taking vitamin D supplements, and conducted the study between December 2020 and June 2021.

A randomized sample of the participants were given a vitamin D blood test and 3,100 people were found to have low vitamin D levels. The other 3,100 people were assigned to be controls.

The study participants with low levels of vitamin D were then randomized into two groups of 1,550 people who were assigned to take either 3,200 IU or 800 IU of a vitamin D supplement each day for six months. However, the study was not blinded or placebo controlled: Each person knew they were taking a supplement provided by two pharmaceutical companies that supported the study.

During the six months of the trial, neither the high nor low dose of vitamin D had any effect on preventing respiratory tract infections or confirmed Covid-19 cases when compared with the control group, according to the study.

The results contradict two previous meta-analyses of randomized clinical trials conducted by Martineau and his colleagues that did find a significant, albeit small, protective impact against catching respiratory illnesses.

Using a low dose

The Norwegian study, conducted between November 2020 and June 2021, divided 34,601 people between the ages of 18 and 75 into two groups. Each group took either 1 teaspoon (5 milliliters) of cod liver oil or 1 teaspoon of corn oil, which served as a placebo, each day for six months over the winter.

Each teaspoon of cod liver oil contained approximately 400 IU (10 micrograms) of vitamin D, Søraas said. Cod liver oil is a staple in Norway, used for centuries to add vitamin D and omega-3 fatty acids to the Norwegian diet. However, 75.5% of the people in the study were not using vitamin D supplements before enrollment.

Unlike the study from the UK, where many people were vitamin D deficient, testing in Norway showed 90% of people in the cod liver oil group and 72% of those in the placebo group had adequate levels at the start of the study: “But we did not find that this measure influenced the chance of getting COVID-19 or other acute respiratory infections,” Søraas said.

However, just like the UK study, the Norwegian study found vitamin D in cod liver oil had no preventive impact on respiratory infections or confirmed cases of Covid-19.

“The overall message is consistent — two differently-designed studies investigating related interventions in slightly different populations — but the same bottom line — no effect seen,” UK study author Martineau said.

“As a medical doctor I see much speculation that very high doses of vitamin D could have beneficial effects for a range of different diseases, but I would encourage everybody to follow science-based government recommendations for all nutrients,” Søraas said.

“Our results support existing recommendations which do not include massive doses.”

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