An open dining area has a custom dry bar, glass shelving, storage and two refrigerated drawers. The primary bedroom suite has been enlarged to include a dressing room with six built-in closets, a separate bedroom closet and a bathroom with heat-controlled floors, a solid quartz floating double vanity with up lighting and a full-sized step-in shower with a hand-held body spray. This home is located in a building with an include indoor pool, two fitness areas, a large outdoor patio with grills and tennis/pickle ball courts.Īgent: Carla Walker, International Real Estate, 31 The second bedroom has a walk-in closet and works as a guest suite or a private office. *Some listing photos are “virtually staged,” meaning they have been digitally altered to represent different furnishing or decorating options. To feature your luxury listing of $800,000 or more in Chicago Tribune’s Dream Homes, send listing information and high-res photos to our Chicago Dream Homes Facebook group for more luxury listings and real estate news.06.04 West warns of Russian cyber-attacksįive allied countries including the United States have warned that “evolving intelligence” indicates Russia is poised to launch powerful cyberattacks against rivals supporting Ukraine. The members of the “Five Eyes” intelligence sharing network - the US, Britain, Canada, Australia and New Zealand - said Moscow could also involve existing cybercrime groups in launching attacks on governments, institutions and businesses, in a statement released on Wednesday. “Evolving intelligence indicates that the Russian government is exploring options for potential cyberattacks,” they said in an official cyber threat alert. In addition, it said, “some cybercrime groups have recently publicly pledged support for the Russian government.” This activity may occur as a response to the unprecedented economic costs imposed on Russia as well as materiel support provided by the United States and US allies and partners.” Russia’s invasion of Ukraine could expose organisations both within and beyond the region to increased malicious cyber activity. “Some groups have also threatened to conduct cyber operations against countries and organisations providing materiel support to Ukraine,” it said. Wednesday’s alert said Russian state-sponsored cyber actors have the ability to compromise IT networks, to steal large amounts of data from them while remaining hidden, to deploy destructive malware and to lock down networks with “distributed denial of service” attacks. The alert identified more than a dozen hacking groups, both parts of Russian intelligence and military bodies and privately operated, which present threats.
It warned that infrastructure could be particularly targeted in countries Moscow might want to take action against. US, Australian, Canadian, New Zealand, and UK cybersecurity authorities urge critical infrastructure network defenders to prepare for and mitigate potential cyber threats - including destructive malware, ransomware, DDoS attacks, and cyber espionage - by hardening their cyber defences and performing due diligence in identifying indicators of malicious activity,” the alert said.