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Recent Editions
Human Times
North America
Sony Pictures Entertainment has announced a shift in business strategy, precipitating job cuts across its film, TV and corporate divisions. “As we lean into those priorities, we need to operate with greater focus, speed, and alignment to strengthen our differentiated capabilities,” Chief Executive Officer Ravi Ahuja wrote in a note to staff. “To support our growth, we are aligning our organization with where the business is going — not where it has been. That requires changes to how we are structured and where we invest.” The company declined to specify how many would lose their jobs.
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Human Times
UK
Iceland has offered a job to a former Waitrose employee dismissed after confronting a shoplifter, in a case that has sparked wider debate about retail crime and staff policies. The offer came from Iceland chairman Richard Walker, who publicly invited Walker Smith to join the company. Smith had worked at Waitrose for 17 years and was dismissed after attempting to stop a theft of Easter eggs, breaching company rules that prohibit staff from intervening due to safety risks. The incident prompted political criticism and public support, with a fundraiser raising more than £7,500. Waitrose defended its decision, emphasising the importance of staff safety and adherence to policy, while the worker said repeated shoplifting had led to frustration and his actions.
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Human Times
Europe
The UK's National Cyber Security Centre (NCSC) warns that Russian state cyber group APT28 has exploited vulnerable internet routers to enable domain name system (DNS) hijacking operations. The resulting malicious DNS resolutions enable adversary-in-the-middle (AitM) attacks that harvest passwords, OAuth tokens and other credentials for web and email related services. This puts organisations at risk of credential theft, data manipulation and broader compromise. The NCSC has provided a list of mitigation measures that could help in defending against the activity described in its advisory.
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Human Times
Middle East
Reuters reports that some Western and Saudi firms in Riyadh extended work-from-home advisories earlier this week amid mounting concern over the US-imposed deadline for Iran to open the Strait of Hormuz or face "hell." The advisories, which were sent out on Monday and Tuesday, related to work in Riyadh's King Abdullah Financial District, Faisaliah Tower, Business Gate and Laysen Valley, people familiar with the matter said. The locations are home to offices for major US banks and tech firms including Microsoft and Apple, and also Saudi entities such as the sovereign wealth fund. The US and Iran have now agreed a two-week ceasefire that would open the Strait of Hormuz shortly before Donald Trump’s deadline for Tehran to meet his demands or face strikes that he said would kill “a whole civilisation.”
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