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A major supplier to Whole Foods said it has shut down deliveries after it was hacked leading to fears of empty store shelves.

United Natural Foods, a $31 billion distributor of natural and organic products, said in a regulatory filing on Monday that it identified unauthorized activity in our systems and has notified law enforcement while it conducts an investigation.

The Rhode Island-based company, also known as UNFI, discovered the issue last week and took some systems offline while we investigate, according to the filing.

“We are assessing the unauthorized activity and working to restore our systems to safely bring them back online.”

The company reached out to its retail customers on Saturday and Sunday informing them that there will be no deliveries on Monday, adding that it did not know when the disruption would end, sources told The Post.

Its bringing the company to a standstill with no orders generated and no orders coming in, said Steve Schwartz, director of sales for the Morton Williams grocery store chain in New York City.

Among the items that Morton Williams 20 stores receive from UNFI are frozen and dairy items, including Stoneyfield yogurts as well as Sanpellegrino and La Croix sparkling waters.

The chain has already contacted other distributors to supply these and other items if the disruption is prolonged, Schwartz said.

But others were more immediately impacted.

I work at a Diamond store in a scratch bakery and they aren’t even sending us flour, cake blanks or brown butter cookies, wrote one Reddit user on Sunday. We’re trying to figure out if we need to call all our customers who have special orders in this week, because of course its graduation week too.

Another bakery business posted were out of components to make the cakes and tarts so well have an empty case til we get our delivery. We sold out of a lot last night so today will be $0 cake sales ?Cant do much production. Basically will bake off what we have for the floor until something else comes in.

A person who identified as a UNFI employee posted, Our systems went down nationwide around 3:30 pm last Friday. At my location they have been calling us in every day since to come pick y’all’s groceries in hopes that our systems come back on. So far that has not been the case. That’s all we know, corporate isn’t telling us s–t.

Whole Foods did not immediately comment.

UNFI is scheduled to announce its third quarter results on June 10. Its shares are down 8.5% on Monday to about $25.

Its a mystery as of yet what is going to happen and how long its going to be until things are back to normal, wrote another Reddit user who identified as a UNFI employee. Was told by the branch VP that even when they can start to get back on track it will have to be done in phases. So its gonna be a while for things to be back on track fully.

Victorias Secret delayed its earnings release last week after a cyber attack resulted in its website going dark for several days last month.

“What we are seeing with UNFI and, just last week, with Victorias Secret, reflects a growing trend: threat actors are targeting critical infrastructure and high-traffic consumer platforms for maximum disruption and financial leverage,” said Adrianus Warmenhoven, a cybersecurity expert at NordVPN.

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Science

Climate Satellite MethaneSAT Fails After Just One Year in Orbit

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Climate Satellite MethaneSAT Fails After Just One Year in Orbit

One of the world’s most advanced satellites for detecting methane and other gases that contribute to the warming of the planet has gone dark and stopped communicating with ground-based controllers just over a year after being launched into orbit. Created by the nonprofit Environmental Defense Fund (EDF), the satellite — estimated to cost as much as $88 million — hitched a ride into space on a SpaceX rocket in March 2024. It was charged with monitoring methane leaks from oil and gas operations, and then making the data available to policymakers and scientists through open access. But on June 20, contact with the satellite was lost, and attempts to recover it have failed. EDF officially reported on July 1 that MethaneSAT has lost power and appears unlikely to recover.

MethaneSAT Failure Marks Setback for Climate Transparency Despite Data Gains and Global Support

As per a statement released by EDF, MethaneSAT’s failure came despite multiple recovery attempts. The satellite was constructed to lift the veil off methane’s invisible, weighty impact on global warming. It is nowhere near as common as carbon dioxide, but over a timescale of, say, a century, it is 20 to 30 times more efficient at trapping heat in the atmosphere than carbon dioxide. That makes its emissions a prime target in the effort to minimize the risks of global warming. MethaneSAT was developed to independently corroborate industrial methane reports, especially those from fossil fuel extraction. The loss of the satellite is a remarkable setback for transparency in climate science and monitoring of emissions worldwide.

Yet mission operators are hopeful that data already collected will have far-reaching effects. EDF emphasized that insights from MethaneSAT’s year in orbit will continue to be processed and made public in the coming months. The mission included backing from 10 partners such as Harvard University, the New Zealand Space Agency, BAE Systems, Google, and the Bezos Earth Fund.

Officials called MethaneSAT a bold and needed move to hold our climate accountable. Although the mission was cut short, it signaled one of the largest joint efforts between science, advocacy, and technology to battle climate change. “To succeed in meeting the climate challenge, we need bold action and fearless innovation,” EDF mentioned, describing the satellite as “at the vanguard of science.”
MethaneSAT’s brief history highlights the difficulty — and importance — of deploying space-based instruments to try and combat climate change. As other missions get ready to blaze the same trail, the data and experience this little spacecraft provided will influence the future of Earth observation.

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Microsoft Says Xbox Chief Phil Spencer Not Retiring ‘Anytime Soon’ After Rumour Surfaces Amid Layoffs

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New Interstellar Comet 3I/ATLAS Speeds Through Solar System

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New Interstellar Comet 3I/ATLAS Speeds Through Solar System

A newly confirmed interstellar comet is making a rare passage through our solar system — and skywatchers can catch it live online tonight. The object, now called 3I/ATLAS, is just the third interstellar visitor ever detected after the well-known ‘Oumuamua (2017) and 2I/Borisov (2019). The comet was so fresh when first detected on July 1 by the ATLAS telescope in Chile that it hadn’t even been given a name yet; the Minor Planet Center has it listed as “3I,” the “I” standing for interstellar. Tonight’s webcast will kick off at 6 p.m. EDT (2200 GMT) from the Virtual Telescope Project’s virtual observing facilities in Italy.

Interstellar Comet 3I/ATLAS Speeds Toward Sun at 68 km/s, Offers Rare Study Opportunity

As per a report by Space.com, 3I/ATLAS was detected as a faint object displaying subtle cometary features, including a marginal coma and a short tail. Currently located 4.5 astronomical units (AU) from the sun — about 670 million kilometers (416 million miles) — the comet is faint at magnitude 18.8, making it invisible to amateur telescopes. The interstellar object is traveling at an astonishing pace of 68 kilometers per second (152,000 mph) relative to the sun, but NASA officials say it poses no danger to Earth.

It was imaged by the Virtual Telescope Project on July 2, showing the comet as a point of light within the trailing background stars — a sure indication that it is indeed moving through space. 3I/ATLAS should brighten a little as it approaches the sun, particularly when it gets closest, or its perihelion, on Oct. 30, when it swings within 1.4 astronomical units of the sun or Mars’ orbit.

The close pass by this interstellar visitor is a rare chance for astronomers to study the materials and dynamics outside our solar system. 3I/ATLAS, which is racing along at a frenetic pace on an elliptical orbit, may also support research into how these objects change as they sit in different stellar environments.

After disappearing behind the sun in late fall, 3I/ATLAS is projected to return to observational reach in early December. Researchers anticipate further analysis then, expanding our understanding of these rare visitors that traverse the galaxy — and occasionally, pass through our celestial neighborhood.

For the latest tech news and reviews, follow Gadgets 360 on X, Facebook, WhatsApp, Threads and Google News. For the latest videos on gadgets and tech, subscribe to our YouTube channel. If you want to know everything about top influencers, follow our in-house Who’sThat360 on Instagram and YouTube.


The Hunt: Rajiv Gandhi Assassination Now Available For Streaming on SonyLIV

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Politics

OKX CEO apologizes after ‘false positives’ lock users out of accounts

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OKX CEO apologizes after ‘false positives’ lock users out of accounts

OKX CEO apologizes after ‘false positives’ lock users out of accounts

The CEO of OKX says that “false positives” are among the biggest challenges the crypto exchange faces in ensuring global compliance.

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