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Boston Globe
8 minutes ago
- Boston Globe
Autodesk drops pursuit of Boston-based software firm PTC
Advertisement TECH Elmo's hacked X account posted racist messages. Sesame Workshop is trying to regain control. 'Elmo's X account was compromised by an unknown hacker who posted disgusting messages, including antisemitic and racist posts. We are working to restore full control of the account,' a Sesame Workshop spokesperson said Monday. Victoria Will/Associated Press Sesame Workshop was trying to regain full control over its Elmo account on the X platform Monday after a hacker gained access and posted a string of racist and antisemitic messages. 'Elmo's X account was compromised by an unknown hacker who posted disgusting messages, including antisemitic and racist posts. We are working to restore full control of the account,' a Sesame Workshop spokesperson said Monday. Sesame Workshop is the nonprofit behind 'Sesame Street' and Elmo. The account was compromised over the weekend and instead of the usual posts of encouragement and kindness, Elmo's 650,000 followers were given antisemitic threats and a profane reference to the Jeffrey Epstein sex trafficking investigation. Those tweets were soon deleted, though Elmo's account retains a link to a Telegram channel from a user who takes credit for the hack. — ASSOCIATED PRESS Get Starting Point A guide through the most important stories of the morning, delivered Monday through Friday. Enter Email Sign Up ACQUISITIONS Advertisement Milford's Waters Corp. strikes $17.5 billion deal to merge with BD's diagnostics unit Udit Batra, CEO of Waters Corp. Waters is merging with a unit of Becton, Dickinson and Co. in a stock-and-cash deal valued at $17.5 billion. Suzanne Kreiter/Globe Staff Milford lab equipment maker Waters Corp. will acquire the biosciences and diagnostic solutions unit of the medical technology company Becton, Dickinson and Co. in a stock-and-cash deal valued at $17.5 billion, the companies said Monday. BD will spin off the diagnostics unit, which will then be merged with a wholly-owned Waters subsidiary. BD shareholders will receive 39.2 percent of the combined company and $4 billion in cash. Waters shareholders will own 60.8 percent of the combined company. The boards of both companies have approved the deal, which is expected to close near the end of the first quarter of 2026, subject to shareholder and regulatory approval. Waters CEO Udit Batra will lead the combined company. BD's biosciences and diagnostic solutions unit focuses on immunology research and infectious disease diagnostics. The company said in February that it was looking to divest the unit to concentrate on medical devices. Waters, which provides lab equipment, software, and supplies to scientists, had nearly $3 billion in sales in 2024. Waters expects the combination with BD's biosciences and diagnostics solutions unit to more than double those revenues. Waters shares fell almost 14 percent in New York trading Monday. BD's shares were up less than 1 percent. — YOGEV TOBY RETURN TO OFFICE Starbucks takes aim at remote work, says some employees may need to relocate to headquarters Starbucks headquarters in Seattle, Wash., on Feb. 27. David Ryder/Bloomberg Starbucks is requiring some remote workers to return to its headquarters and increasing the number of days that corporate employees are required to work in an office. In a letter to employees posted on Monday, Starbucks chairman and CEO Brian Niccol said corporate employees would need to be in the office four days a week starting in early October instead of three days a week. The Seattle-based company said that all corporate 'people leaders' must be based in either Seattle or Toronto within 12 months. That is a change from February, when it required vice presidents to relocate to Seattle or Toronto. Starbucks said individual employees working under those leaders would not be asked to relocate. But the company said all hiring for future roles and lateral moves will require employees to be based in Seattle or Toronto. 'We are reestablishing our in-office culture because we do our best work when we're together. We share ideas more effectively, creatively solve hard problems, and move much faster,' Niccol wrote in the letter. Niccol said affected workers who choose not to relocate will be eligible for a one-time voluntary exit program with a cash payment. — ASSOCIATED PRESS Advertisement GOVERNMENT Powell asks Fed's inspector general to review renovation project Construction on the Marriner S. Eccles Federal Reserve building in Washington, D.C., on June 25. Al Drago/Bloomberg Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell has made a formal request that the central bank's inspector general review its $2.5 billion building renovation, according to a spokesperson for the IG's office. Republicans are attacking Powell over cost overruns in the refurbishment of two historic buildings controlled by the Fed, with some using the issue to argue it gives the president legal cause for his dismissal. The attacks follow continual anger directed at the Fed by President Trump for its decisions to hold interest rates steady this year. The IG's office declined to comment further. The request was first reported by Axios. The Fed's IG has already reviewed the building programs over time and Powell has discussed the project with the IG in recent weeks, according to a person familiar with the situation who was not authorized to speak about it publicly. The formal request asks the IG to review cost overruns and any other issue the IG deems appropriate. Michael Horowitz, the Fed's IG, was appointed to the job by Powell in June. — BLOOMBERG NEWS Advertisement MEDIA BBC ends ties with 'MasterChef' host Gregg Wallace after investigation The BBC said in a statement that Wallace's behavior 'falls below the values of the BBC and the expectations we have for anyone who works with or for us.' Frank Augstein/Associated Press The BBC said Monday that it would stop working with Gregg Wallace, a mainstay of the network and the longtime host of its hit television show 'MasterChef,' after an investigation substantiated dozens of sexual misconduct allegations against him. Of the 83 allegations made against Wallace, 45 were upheld, the broadcaster said. These included three instances of him being 'in a state of undress' and one of unwelcome physical contact. The majority of claims against Wallace, who hosted the show for 19 years, involve 'inappropriate sexual language and humor,' but the probe also found allegations of culturally and racially insensitive comments. The investigation, conducted by the law firm Lewis Silkin, involved interviews with 78 witnesses over seven months. It covered incidents between 2005 and 2024. 'The volume and consistency of substantiated allegations' made Wallace's return to the hit cooking show " untenable," according to a statement from the production company behind the show, Banijay. Wallace denied many of the allegations in a statement posted to Instagram. On Monday, he wrote, 'I am deeply sorry for any distress caused.' He also said that 'some of his humor and language missed the mark,' adding, 'A late autism diagnosis has helped me understand how I communicate and how I'm perceived. I'm still learning.' The BBC said in a statement that it had missed opportunities to address his behavior earlier and that it accepted that more 'could and should have been done sooner.' -- NEW YORK TIMES Advertisement ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE Defense Department to begin using Grok, Musk's controversial AI model The chat window for chatbot Grok. Andrey Rudakov/Bloomberg The Defense Department will begin using Grok, the artificial intelligence chatbot built by Elon Musk's start-up xAI, the company said in a post Monday. The xAI announcement came as Grok unveiled what it called 'Grok for Government,' a suite that allows agencies and federal offices to adopt its chatbots for their specific uses. President Trump has encouraged more rapid adoption of artificial intelligence tools since taking office in January. Musk was a member of the Trump administration, overseeing the US DOGE Service, until late May. He has since become a critic of Trump's signature tax and spending legislation. In a news release, the Defense Department said the contract award is worth up to $200 million. The department issued similar awards to Google, Anthropic and OpenAI, it said. Grok came under fire last week after launching into an antisemitic rant and invoking Adolf Hitler after it was a programmed to be less politically correct. The incident prompted the company to say it would improve its model. A day later, xAI unveiled a sweeping update that it claimed put Grok on the cutting edge of AI development. — WASHINGTON POST


The Verge
31 minutes ago
- The Verge
PlayStation is giving you another chance to get its 30th anniversary DualSense controller.
PlayStation is giving you another chance to get its 30th anniversary DualSense controller. There will be a 'limited restock' on September 9th, according to a post on PlayStation's Facebook page.

Los Angeles Times
42 minutes ago
- Los Angeles Times
Elmo said what? Sesame Workshop pins ‘disgusting' racist, obscene tweets on hacker
It seems Elmo's world recently included vitriolic racist, antisemitic and foul-mouthed social media posts. 'Sesame Street's' perpetually 3½-year-old mascot caught his social media fans off guard over the weekend as he seemingly traded his wholesome tweets on X (formerly Twitter) in for hateful posts, including calling for violence against the Jewish community and others using lewd language to demand that President Trump release Jeffrey Epstein's 'client list,' alleging he was involved in the late financier's sex trafficking operation. The obscenity-laden posts shared Sunday went viral, with screenshots also making the rounds. As of Monday morning, the posts have been scrubbed from Elmo's page. A spokesperson for Sesame Workshop, the organization behind 'Sesame Street' and Elmo, told the Associated Press in a statement, 'Elmo's X account was compromised by an unknown hacker who posted disgusting messages including antisemitic and racist posts.' 'We are working to restore full control of the account,' the spokesperson added. A representative for X did not immediately confirm the alleged hack or provide additional information to The Times on Monday. In addition to the problematic tweets, the alleged hacker left a mysterious link on the beloved puppet's page. The link, which has since been removed, redirected followers and internet sleuths to a user's Telegram channel. On Telegram, the user appears to take credit for the hack. 'Thanks Elmo,' reads one Telegram message shared Sunday, the same day Elmo's odd posts hit the timeline. In another Telegram message, the user praises Adolf Hitler and rapper Ye (formerly Kanye West), who has his own handful of controversies involving antisemitism and hateful comments. The since-deleted tweets presented a very dramatic tone shift in the red furball's online presence. Elmo, whose X activity mostly consists of photos with friends and wholesome greetings, notably broke the internet last year with an innocuous post: 'Elmo is just checking in! How is everybody doing?' The tweet, which is pinned to the top of Elmo's profile, prompted some brutal honesty from a range of followers. 'Resisting the urge to tell Elmo that I am kinda sad,' replied 'West Side Story' star Rachel Zegler. Fielding online confessions of existential dread and general anxiety, Elmo responded to fans that he 'learned that it is important to ask a friend how they are doing.' He added: 'Elmo will check in again soon, friends! Elmo loves you.' In the wake of the viral tweet, Sesame Workshop also offered fans and followers a mental health resource guide on its website, reminding users on X that 'Mental health is health!' Clearly, the alleged hacker didn't get the memo on Elmo's longstanding agenda of kindness and compassion. Former Times staff writer Nardine Saad contributed to this report.