IT giant Globant discloses hack after Lapsus$ leaks 70GB of stolen data

The silhouette of a child against a wall covered in ones and zeroes.

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IT and software development firm Globant said in a statement Wednesday that it experienced a network breach. The statement appeared to confirm claims made by Lapsus$, a group that has successfully compromised Microsoft, Nvidia, Okta, and other victims in recent weeks.

Lapsus$ is a relative newcomer to the data-extortion scene. While the group’s tactics and procedures lack sophistication, members largely believed to be young and technically immature make up for it with persistence. Gang members were rumored to be among seven individuals arrested last week by London police. A leak Tuesday on the Lapsus$ Telegram channel included data the group said came from a recent hack on Globant, raising questions about precisely what relationship the suspects, aged 16 to 21, had with Lapsus$.

Not dead yet

London police don’t appear to have explicitly said the suspects were members of Lapsus$, “but, assuming [the suspects] are, we still don’t know how many other individuals are associated with the operation or where they may be based,” Brett Callow, a threat analyst with security firm Emsisoft, wrote in a private message. “For example, at least one of the members appears to be a native speaker—or, more accurately, writer—of Brazilian Portuguese.”

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Today’s best deals: 8BitDo game controllers, Razer gaming mice, and more

Today’s best deals: 8BitDo game controllers, Razer gaming mice, and more

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It’s time for another Dealmaster! Our latest roundup of the best tech deals from around the web includes a new low price on 8BitDo’s Pro 2 gamepad, which is down to $42.50 at Amazon. If you prefer to shop elsewhere, it’s also available for 50 cents more at Best Buy. The wireless gamepad normally retails for $50, so this isn’t a massive discount, but it’s the best price we’ve tracked.

We gave the Pro 2 a positive review when it launched last year, calling it a “more useful, more comfortable, and more customizable” take on Nintendo’s Switch Pro Controller despite costing $20 less. The controller works across Switch, PC, macOS, Android, iOS, and Raspberry Pi devices. Compared to Nintendo’s “Pro” pad, its biggest addition is two programmable back buttons. These can make pulling off certain inputs in quicker-paced, competitive-minded games more convenient since you won’t have to physically move your hands around as much as you normally would.

The controller is well-built and comfortable, with sizable face buttons, joysticks with a satisfying level of tension, and an even weight balance. Unlike the Pro Controller, the Pro 2 also has analog triggers; this means they’ll respond to varying levels of pressure, which can be useful in, say, gradually accelerating in a racing game, instead of always going full-throttle. The D-pad is a bit firmer than what you’d find on a PS5 or Xbox controller, as it takes after the old Super Nintendo pad, but presses feel crisp and distinct, so it works well for old-school 2D platformers or puzzlers like Tetris. 8BitDo also has a fairly extensive companion app that lets you remap inputs, create and assign macros, and fine-tune the sensitivity of the joysticks and triggers. These tweaks, among others, can be saved across three separate profiles.

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Antitrust bill in Senate would help rein in Big Tech platforms, DOJ says

Antitrust bill in Senate would help rein in Big Tech platforms, DOJ says

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The Department of Justice is throwing its weight behind an antitrust bill working its way through the Senate, with the department saying that it needs new tools to help police markets dominated by platforms such as Amazon, Meta (formerly Facebook), Apple, and Google.

“The Department views the rise of dominant platforms as presenting a threat to open markets and competition, with risks for consumers, businesses, innovation, resiliency, global competitiveness, and our democracy,” Peter Hyun, acting assistant attorney general, wrote in a letter to the Senate. “Discriminatory conduct by dominant platforms can sap the rewards from other innovators and entrepreneurs, reducing the incentives for entrepreneurship and innovation.” The letter was first obtained by The Wall Street Journal.

The American Innovation and Choice Online Act, cosponsored by Sen. Amy Klobuchar (D-Minn.) and Sen. Chuck Grassley (R-Iowa), would limit Big Tech firms’ ability to “unfairly preference” their own products and services. For example, under the proposed bill, Amazon couldn’t boost search rankings of its private-label products, and Apple and Google couldn’t do the same for their apps in their app stores.

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Whether you love the idea or hate it, Lotus is making an electric SUV

A yellow Lotus Eletre

Enlarge / Purists may be aghast, but the commercial reality is that Lotus needs a volume-seller, and that means an SUV. At least it is fully electric. (credit: Lotus)

This week we found out what an electric Lotus SUV will look like when the company showed off a new car called the Eletre. Not everyone will be a fan of the styling, and others will just object to the idea of Lotus making an SUV, electric or otherwise, in the first place.

But keep an open mind, at least until the first road tests. As long as it drives like a Lotus, it might be just the thing to bring a lot of new customers to the marque, not just in Europe and China but here in the US from 2024. And as Porsche so ably demonstrates, it’s a good way to pay for the stuff that makes car nerds get hot under the collar.

The English manufacturer of lightweight sports cars has been in an unusual position these last few years—sufficiently funded, thanks to the same deep pockets that rejuvenated Volvo. Instead of having to warm over an increasingly old platform for small two-seaters, Lotus got to work developing not one but four new architectures.

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Hubble picks up the most distant star yet observed

close up of a red, dotted string of objects amidst a collection of galaxies and stars.

Enlarge / The string of red dots represents the area of maximum magnification, with the location of Earendel indicated by the white arrow. (credit: NASA, ESA, Brian Welch (JHU), Dan Coe (STScI))

We don’t fully understand what the Universe’s first stars looked like. We know they must have formed from hydrogen and helium since most heavier elements were only produced after the stars formed. And we know that the lack of those heavier elements changed the dynamics of star formation in a way that meant the first stars must have been very large. But just how large remains an unanswered question.

Now, researchers are announcing that they might be a step closer to directly observing one of those stars. Thanks to a fortuitous alignment between a distant star and an intervening galaxy cluster, gravitational lensing has magnified an object that was present less than a billion years after the Big Bang. The object is likely to either be a lone star or a compact system of two or three stars. And its discoverers say they have already booked time for follow-on observations with NASA’s latest space telescope.

Gravity’s lens

Lenses work by arranging materials so that light travels on a curved path through them. Gravity, which distorts space-time itself, can perform a similar function, altering space so that light travels a curved path. There have been plenty of examples of the gravitational influences of objects in the foreground creating a lens-like effect, amplifying and/or distorting the light from a more distant object behind them.

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