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SpaceX launches Starlink mission from Cape Canaveral, releases new Ax-4 crewed launch date

SpaceX launches Starlink mission from Cape Canaveral, releases new Ax-4 crewed launch date

Yahoo6 hours ago

A SpaceX Falcon 9 rocketed from Cape Canaveral northeastward over the Atlantic Ocean in the early morning darkness Wednesday, June 18, propelling another payload of 28 Starlink broadband satellites into low-Earth orbit.
The Starlink 10-18 mission lifted off at 1:55 a.m. from Launch Complex 40 at Cape Canaveral Space Force Station while the bulk of East-Central Florida was devoid of significant cloud cover.
Designed, owned and operated by SpaceX, the Starlink constellation now connects more than 6 million people with high-speed internet in 140 countries, territories and other markets. Since June 6, Starlink officials announced this list now includes Dominica, the Marshall Islands and Guinea-Bissau.
Cape Canaveral: Is there a launch today? Upcoming SpaceX, Axiom, ULA rocket launch schedule at Cape Canaveral
Roughly three hours before the Starlink liftoff, NASA, Axiom Space and SpaceX made news by announcing the Ax-4 crewed mission will target 3:42 a.m. Sunday, June 22, for launch from NASA's Kennedy Space Center.
The four Ax-4 private astronauts will lift off inside a SpaceX Dragon atop a Falcon 9. But their mission was delayed so small-leak repairs could be studied in the 43-foot-long, Russia-built Zvezda service module of the International Space Station.
The Falcon 9 first-stage booster used during the June 18 Starlink mission logged its fifth flight, SpaceX reported. This relatively new booster previously launched SES O3b mPOWER-E, Crew-10, Bandwagon-3 and one Starlink mission
Following stage separation, the booster descended and landed on the SpaceX drone ship Just Read the Instructions in the Atlantic Ocean.
The Starlink mission clocked in as the 51st orbital rocket launch thus far during 2025 from Cape Canaveral Space Force Station and KSC.
For the latest news and launch schedule from Cape Canaveral Space Force Station and NASA's Kennedy Space Center, visit floridatoday.com/space. Another easy way: Click here to sign up for our weekly Space newsletter.
Rick Neale is a Space Reporter at FLORIDA TODAY. Contact Neale at Rneale@floridatoday.com. Twitter/X: @RickNeale1
Space is important to us and that's why we're working to bring you top coverage of the industry and Florida launches. Journalism like this takes time and resources. Please support it with a subscription here.
This article originally appeared on Florida Today: SpaceX launches Starlink mission, releases new Ax-4 crewed launch date

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Wyze says its security cameras deserve your trust again
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'It's 100% deployed on our most popular cameras — Wyze Cam v4, v3, Pan v3, and OG,' Crosby says, adding that it's coming to the rest soon. Some older cameras don't have the hardware to support it, but Wyze is exploring ways to accommodate them. Users can check to see if their cameras are on the new firmware on Wyze's site. Investing in rebuilding After the 2024 breach, Cosby says Wyze regrouped around security. 'We went through our entire security stack, evaluating where we can improve, reviewing third-party tools, and removing them where we can. Where we have to use them, we are only building with the best platforms,' he says. 'We've invested in AWS tools – including Lacework, Security Hub, GuardDuty, and Q CLI.' Wyze also hired several security firms 'to verify and validate what we've done.' VerifiedView should prevent the types of scenarios Wyze experienced in 2023 and 2024 around issues with third-party tools. 'If everything else fails and people get into the cloud or data gets switched, people cannot see other people's content,' Crosby says. It works by attaching your user ID to your camera – and therefore onto any photo, video, or livestream it produces. Before you can access the footage, VerifiedView checks that the ID from the device you're using matches. If it doesn't, access is denied. The tech is similar to DRM (Digital Rights Management) created to combat content piracy, explains Sharon Hagi, a cybersecurity expert and chief security officer at Silicon Labs, who reviewed Wyze's published materials at The Verge's request. 'At the core of VerifiedView is a well-established and critical data security concept: cryptographic binding of user identity and device data to digital content,' he says, calling it a significant step forward in smart home security. 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