The report offers clues to a crucial question about the recent attack: how did the US government miss hackers in the computer networks of so many agencies? AFP Relaxnews
For years, US officials have warned about the dangers of cyberattacks involving the electronics supply chain. This week’s revelation that a growing number of US federal agencies were breached in a widespread attack by suspected Russian hackers shows how little they have followed their own advice.
Last year, for instance, the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency, known as CISA, reported that federal agencies faced about 180 different threats from the digital supply chain, the hardware and software that goes into making up a computer network. CISA’s parent, the Department of Homeland Security, was among those agencies breached in the recent attack.
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The Amazon story in Arkansas continues, with parts untold by local boosters, as usual
MORE JOBS: Some will be coming to North Little Rock. Image from Amazon’s website
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The D-G was favored with an advance look at the news release (gee, nobody called us or Arkansas Business, which also had reported on this earlier), perhaps because I’ve been something of a damp blanket on the cheerleaders for this and the previous Amazon facilities opened in Little Rock. Additional news today is that the state will provide $2 million for highway improvements to connect the site with U.S. 70 (chump change in the corporate welfare game but, as a retailer, Amazon doesn’t qualify for most of what Arkansas offers). Amazon also says about 500 jobs will be created by the facility, which will handle the shipment of larger items sold through the Amazon website.
Amazon hasturned a middle-class warehouse career into a McJob
Despite a starting wage of $15 an hour, the company is dragging down pay in the logistics industry and bracing for a fight with unions.
Compártelo:
17 diciembre, 2020
Amazon.com Inc. job ads are everywhere. Plastered on city buses, displayed on career web sites, slotted between songs on classic rock stations. They promise a quick start, $15 an hour and health insurance. In recent weeks, America’s second-largest employer has rolled out videos featuring happy package handlers wearing masks, a pandemic-era twist on its annual holiday season hiring spree. Amazon’s object is to persuade potential recruits that there’s no better place to work.