People living near airports that service piston-engine aircraft are disproportionately exposed to lead, a dangerous neurotoxin.
The Guardian has confirmed that it was the victim of a ransomware attack, and that the damage is more serious than first thought. In an update to staff, Guardian group chief Anna Bateson and newspaper editor-in-chief Katharine Viner said the December attack was “highly sophisticated” and accessed the personal data of UK employees. There was no evidence of the data being exposed online, or that the intruders had breached data for readers or non-UK editions.
Bateson and Viner understood that this was a “criminal” ransomware campaign, and that the perpetrators hadn’t targeted The Guardian as a media outlet. The paper has alerted both police as well as the UK’s Information Commissioner’s Office. The leaders didn’t identify the suspected culprits.
The fallout from the cyberattack has worsened. While The Guardian now expects some vital systems to return within two weeks, workers now won’t return to the office until early February. That will give the IT team more time to restore infrastructure, the outlet said. Staff have largely been working from home since the attack was spotted on December 20th, but were originally told only to stay away from the office for the remainder of that week.
The company has continued to run its online and print publications in the weeks since. Even so, the confirmation still makes this one of the more serious online security incidents for the press in recent memory. Fast Company was knocked offline for eight days early last fall, while The New York Postfell prey to a rogue employee weeks later. The Guardian is still dealing with the consequences of the ransomware over three weeks later, and won’t return to normality for a while yet.
Damar Hamlin’s recovery is a miracle, but it highlights the painful reality that American football — the NFL in particular — has always been careless with Black bodies.
The incredibly powerful Webb Space Telescope—which has fed us dazzling images of the cosmos since July—has officially found its first exoplanet, a world that is approximately the same size as Earth.
Can You Play GamePigeon On Android?
Posted in: Today's ChiliGamePigeon brings the fun straight to iMessage on iPhones, but for the most part, Android users are out of luck unless they want to explore alternatives.
The first season of Willow is over and the first thing to say is “I want more.” While the final episode brought this season’s stories together in a completely satisfying, entertaining way, the lore of this franchise and world is so vast that even without this episode’s big cliffhanger, these characters and actors are…
MedTech is supposed to save lives and push the industry forward, but these flops caused the opposite to happen, often with irreparable harm.
Ebikes No Longer Look Like Ebikes
Posted in: Today's ChiliLike the earliest electric cars, which were easy to spot thanks to their over-emphasis on aerodynamics, e-bikes tend to stand out with thick frames designed to hold bulky batteries. But as the DB-E from Detroit Bikes whizzes past you on the bike lane, you’d have to really look close to tell it’s got an electric motor…
Revel Is Planning A Massive EV Charging Network – Here's When Its Set To Open
Posted in: Today's ChiliNew York’s EV charging infrastructure is expanding significantly, courtesy of Revel, which plans to add over 100 new fast charging stalls to the five boroughs.
ABL's Failed Inaugural Rocket Launch Marks Space Industry's Third Failure in Weeks
Posted in: Today's ChiliIn a concerning trend, ABL Space System’s RS1 rocket became the third rocket to succumb to a launch failure in less than a month. The botched liftoff came just 24 hours after Virgin Orbit’s LauncherOne rocket carrying a payload of nine satellites experienced an anomaly that preventing it from reaching orbit.