Thailand has posted a record jump in COVID-19 cases following a spike in infections at the country’s overcrowded prisons and detention facilities that has affected several young activists held on charges of insulting the monarchy.
Health authorities on Thursday reported a total of 4,887 cases in a new daily record for Thailand since the pandemic began.
Of that figure, 2,835 of the cases involved detainees, many of them held in pre-trial detention at two prisons in the Thai capital, Bangkok.
Human Rights Watch, a United States-based rights group, expressed concern over the COVID-19 outbreaks in prisons on Thursday, saying people in custody were at “grave risk”.
Quarterly Results
Earnings per share increased 87.36% over the past year to ($0.22), which missed the estimate of ($0.16).
Revenue of $88,000 higher by 137.84% year over year, which beat the estimate of $80,000.
Outlook
SenesTech hasn t issued any revenue guidance for the time being.
How To Listen To The Conference Call
Date: May 13, 2021
Don t show me this message again✕
The ransomware group responsible for the attack on Colonial Pipeline’s system has targeted three other companies, CNBC reports.
DarkSide, a Russian-based hacker group, was named by the FBI as being responsible for the ransomware attack that Georgia-based Colonial Pipelines first reported on Friday. The attack forced the company to shut down its 5,500-mile pipeline, causing gas prices to rise and fuel shortages across the Southeast.
The hackers have since revealed three new companies they targeted within the last 24 hours on its site on the dark web, entitled DarkSide Leaks.
One of the companies targeted is a United States-based technology services reseller that’s located in Illinois, according to the CNBC report. In an online post, the hackers boasted stealing more than 600 gigabytes of sensitive information that included passwords and financial information.