The SolarWinds hackers have been blowing through US government departments again. Microsoft said the Nobelium group, identified by the White House last month as being part of the Russian Foreign Intelligence Service, used USAID's mass email system, supplied by the Constant Contact email marketing service, to pose as the US
How hackers wash dirty crypto money
Meanwhile, Lex says crooks and spooks may be stealing encrypted data they hope to decode years from now, once they have access to quantum computing.
We have a new guide to cryptocurrencies and stablecoins, and our markets team explains why every dogecoin has its day, in this video. If you're bored of crypto trading, meme stocks were back in vogue this week.
THE INTERNET OF FIVE THINGS
1. JD Logistics delivers gains
Shares in the supply chain and delivery unit of Chinese ecommerce group JD.com rose 18 per cent before closing 3 per cent higher on their trading debut in Hong Kong. That left the Beijing-based company with a market capitalisation of about $33bn. Lex says the Hong Kong market has simply run out of steam.
2. Carbon counting shopping
Lex has also been examining the prospects of German fashion site About You, which plans to list in Frankfurt, and the latest in its carbon counter series looks at shopping. Buying online may be more eco-friendly than driving to the store for just a couple of items. Somebody who does that three times a week could save about 2kg of carbon a week — the equivalent of two hot baths — by switching to an even averagely efficient e-retailer.
3. SoftBank divorce deal with WeWork co-founder
SoftBank has spelt out the full cost of its bitter divorce from WeWork co-founder Adam Neumann, in which Neumann has received cash, stock awards and fees worth close to $450m following fraught negotiations. With WeWork targeting a second run at an IPO, this time via a merger with a blank-cheque company, the agreement is an attempt to break with the past.
4. Dell and HP warn on shortages
Dell and HP Inc reported quarterly revenue that beat Wall Street estimates on Thursday, as customers continued to shop for PCs. However, shares in both are lower today after they warned the ongoing chip shortage could impact their ability to meet demand for laptops this year.
5. Designing democracy on Mars can improve Earth's politics
A political-science professor at Yale recently challenged her students to write a constitution for Mars. John Thornhill argues designing democracy on Mars can improve how it works on Earth. He says there are good reasons not to replicate our prevailing political systems on the red planet.
Tech tools — Twitter Blue and SpacesTwitter appears to have inadvertently revealed its new subscription option, with a Twitter Blue in-app purchase appearing in its App Store listing for US$2.99 (NZ$4.14) a month. Engadget reports the service appears to include an "undo tweet" feature as well as a "reader mode" that makes it easier to view long threads. It also adds additional customisation options, like new app icons. The social media company also extended its Clubhouse-like Spaces audio chat rooms to mobile web and desktop browsers this week. Can't see it on my TweetDeck yet though.
- Financial Times