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As Walmartâs newly redesigned shopping carts continue to roll out nationwide, some shoppers are complaining about arm and shoulder pain, saying the handlebar is too high for shorter customers. Other, presumably taller, shoppers are hailing the carts as a âgame changer.â
In todayâs email:
Casino cyberattacks: How MGM and Caesars were breached.
Subtraction by ad: Itâs gonna be a long election season in the US.
Digits: Antarcticaâs relatable crisis, an EV charge that lasted 99 hours, and more newsy numbers.
Around the web: A presidential UFO sighting, mummy smells, and a familiar alarm as a ballad.
đ Listen: Itâs time for companies to get wise to the devastating potential of cyberattacks.
The big idea
Scattered Spider, Alphv, and the MGM hack, explained
MGMâs high-profile hack sheds light on how devastating cyberattacks can be â but whoâs responsible?
2023-09-18T00:00:00Z
Juliet Bennett Ryla
For the past several days, casino giant MGM has been gripped by a cyberattack.
Last Monday, MGM reported that a cybersecurity issue had impacted several systems, which it promptly shut down, perVox.
The hack wreaked havoc on its 12 Vegas propertiesâ digital room keys, slot machines, TVs, ATMs, and more, plus MGMâs websites.
How did it happen?
Techniques included âvishingâ (âvoice phishingâ) and âsocial engineering,â or manipulating a person into revealing sensitive information.
In this case, hackers allegedly used publicly available LinkedIn info to impersonate an employee and tricked someone at MGMâs IT help desk into revealing access credentials.
Who did this?
Thatâs complicated, as two separate â but connected â groups have claimed responsibility.
Scattered Spider is believed to be a group of European and US hackers in their teens and 20s who specialize in social engineering.
Someone claiming to represent Scattered Spider told the Financial Times they wanted to rig the slot machines â a la Oceanâs Thirteen, which the rep said theyâd never watched. When that failed, they decided to hold stolen data for ransom instead.
Scattered Spider also allegedly hacked Caesars Entertainment, which paid $15m in ransom.
Alphv/Black Cat runs a ransomware-as-a-service business, selling malware to other hackers. It was responsible for ~12% of cyberattacks in the first four months of 2022 and recently posted 2.5TB of data it stole from semiconductor maker Seiko.
Via a statement, it claimed to be the real culprit of the MGM hack (but not Caesars) and denied the slot machine plot.
While Spider is affiliated with Alphv and has used its malware in the past, it remains unclear how the two are connected â if at all â here.
Why?
Alphv seemed to enjoy excoriating MGM, accusing it of insider trading, shoddy privacy practices, and âgreed, incompetence, and corruption.â
But mostly, money â MGMâs market cap is $14.4B. Ransomware hacks frequently target large organizations with money and sensitive info: hospitals, school systems, cities, etc.
Experts toldWired they hope high-profile hacks like MGMâs will bring more awareness to the devastating potential of cyberattacks â and perhaps new policies and strategies to combat them.
TRENDING
Empire state of mind: How often do men think about the Roman Empire? According to the latest social media trend, âa lot.â Women are taking to TikTok to ask the men in their lives this question, and it turns out some are daydreaming about ancient Rome as much as 3x a day.
SNIPPETS
United Auto Workerslaunched a targeted strike plan that will affect General Motors, Ford, and Stellantis. The strike began with 145k workers walking out of three auto plants in hopes of raising workersâ pay.
Meanwhile⌠America saw an estimated 4.1m missed days of work in August due to strikes, according to the Labor Department â the biggest monthly total since 2000.
TikTok is requiring many of its ~7k US employees to work in the office 3x a week beginning in October. Ahead of the transition, the company introduced an app that tracks employee badge swipes and absences.
Also worth keeping track of⌠European regulators fined TikTok $368m for failing to protect childrenâs accounts. Citations include setting kidsâ profiles public by default and a lack of a verification process for its parental control security feature.
Lost and frowned: A new study suggests retailers lose $100B a year to consumer fraud techniques like return fraud, bots, and coupon stacking. One company polled claimed it lost $14m+ after 4k users created 137k fake accounts to take advantage of a discount code.
In related news⌠California is responding to a string of smash-and-grab retail robberies with $267m in spending to increase police presence and upgrade surveillance equipment statewide.
Planet Fitnessousted longtime CEO Chris Rondeau, who has held the position for over a decade. Shares plummeted 16% following the announcement, closing at ~$50 a share, the lowest level since 2020.
Princess Dianaâs famed âBlack Sheepâ sweater sold at auction for $1.14m to someone whoâs apparently unaware that the projected price was $80k â and that sweaters are only $19 at Old Navy right now.
Chart
Olivia Heller
The local TV business approves this message
Americans will be attacked by attack ads at a record clip over the next 14 months.
2023-09-18T00:00:00Z
Ben Berkley
If you find a good rock to hide under until Nov. 6, 2024, please let us know?
Another Election Day is fast approaching for Americans â just 413 days away, somehow â but political ad projections suggest itâll feel like 413 years.
Campaign advertising spend is expected to hit a record $10.2B for the 2024 cycle, per ad-tracking firm AdImpact.
Our patience will lose, but who wins?
Incredibly, for an industry thatâs been losing steam (and viewers) fast, local television will be a big beneficiary, projected to land half of the collective $10.2B ad spend, perBloomberg.
Which is⌠bizarre.
This summer, streaming services saw record viewership, outdrawing both broadcast TV and, for the first time, cable. Yet:
Local TV is expected to haul in $5.1B of the political ad spend, with cable TV landing $1.9B in prizes.
Streaming, meanwhile, is projected to see only $1.3B, with digital ads trailing behind at $1.2B.
At least radioâs place in all of this makes sense, accounting for only $400m.
What gives? Democratic operative Marc Levitt wrote in 2018 about the âwarpedâ incentives of campaigns, which are âconditioned to prioritize⌠pricey TV ads.â He noted that older candidates and consultants, and their âTV eraâ orthodoxies, remained in charge.
Thatâs apparently still the case today; if anything shows off the slow-to-change ways of the political engine, itâs a traditional TV-led campaign spend.
But hey, at leastâŚ
⌠now you know to avoid your local stations for the next 14 months?
And if youâre already sick of it all, hang in there â to date, weâve put $652m of campaign ads behind us, so thereâs only another ~$9.55B worth of ads left to endure.
Free Resource
How to run team meetings like a boss
In spite of the movement to minimize meetings, we feel that weekly heat checks keep us aligned and flying in a unified direction.
But keep them brief â some notes are best said on Slack.
Managers can use this free guide on organizing meetings that respect everybodyâs time. It runs through practical ways to handle invites, meetings, and follow-up comms.
Pretend like you had an epiphany. Pull up with a brand-new protocol.
Antarctica has a housing shortage too, unreal EV records, and more newsy numbers
Plus: A record âSuper Mario Brosâ speed run, and an increase in $100k+ American households.
2023-09-18T00:00:00Z
Ben Berkley
$74.8k: The median US household income in 2022, down 0.8% YoY, per the Census Bureauâs annual survey. Fortunately, though the median household income fell a tad, no state saw an increase in its poverty rate. Also notable: a 3% uptick in American households making $100k+, now up to 37% of homes.
4:54.631: The new record for speed-running âSuper Mario Bros,â set by gamer Niftski. Per Ars Technica, this impressive feat requires a âpixel-perfect executionâ of a particular levelâs challenges and is just 0.35 seconds away from a machine speed run. For comparison, the average time to beat the gameâs main story is two hours.
51%: Proportion of planned scientific missions canceled or curtailed at the United States Antarctic Program this summer. A leading reason for the reduction is a familiar story on the other six continents: a housing shortage. The National Science Foundationâs McMurdo Station is meant to host up to 1.2k scientists and support staff, but itâs a few hundred beds short. Covid and inflation have hampered a $500m renovation project, including a much-needed 285-bed dormitory.
1.6k miles: New record distance covered on a single charge by an EV prototype. Students from the Technical University of Munich who built the long-range EV drove it around an empty airplane hangar â for 99+ straight hours âuntil its battery died. Amateur Alps-adjacent scientists are on a roll this month: Students at the Academic Motorsports Club Zurich built another record-setting EV, this one recognized as the fastest accelerating electric car, going from zero to 62 mph in less than a full second.
AROUND THE WEB
đ˝ On this day: In 1973, former President Jimmy Carter reported a UFO sighting in Georgia. During his 1976 presidential campaign, he vowed to encourage the government to release all info on UFOs to the public, but later backtracked, citing national security.
đš Thatâs cool: The iPhone alarm, but make it a ballad.
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Todayâs email was brought to you by Juliet Bennett Rylah and Sara Friedman.
Editing by: Ben âDepressedly surfing on South Pole Zillowâ Berkley.Was this email forwarded to you? Sign up here.