I didn't know about this, thanks for posting! We have been using a custom Bash script to retrieve the list of sub-project directories that had been changed since the last commit by recursively scanning its sub-paths and running Git commands to find the last update on each, but this looks much, much better.
This article does not include Okta's statement claiming they had not been breached.
Regardless, their statement was a legal word-soup that bounced around the issue. The Lapsus$ team responded to it and said they could reset the passwords and MFA of over 95% of Okta customers which would mean they could get into any account, and thus any service, they wanted, though obviously they would be noticed pretty soon after.
This is both sides claiming things without any evidence, mind you, so take it with as many grains of salt as you need.
TypeScript is a "replacement" for JavaScript in that it has become the defacto standard for any serious project for at least three years now.
They are not two separate languages at all, TS is a superset of JS and exists within the JS ecosystem and is designed so that JS projects can be incrementally migrated to TS, it's one of the first things in the documentation.
Of course not, there are a plethora of factors that would alter the effectiveness of UBI, looking at it so simply and then rejecting it outright is dishonest.
Money would majorly come from those who have the greater means to pay larger amounts into the system, and on the hypothesis that bettering the material conditions of those in the lower and middle class will necessarily lead to increasing productivity and thus (and 'thus' is a large leap) greater general income that can partly be paid back into the system in a cycle.
You can use purchasing power parity differences to check it out. Find like-minded first world people to pool a fraction of their income and you can offer UBI to a third world village or town.
Voice, video and text chat with unlimited bandwidth, streaming resolution and storage space all for free, and all much, _much_ easier to use for the average user than any other voice and video communication client ever made.