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from their accounts. The fallout continued this week after MyPayrollHRs third-party processor, Cachet Financial Services, announced it was no longer handling payroll transactions. According to multiple reports, Cachet sent out an email to clients this week stating:聽 With extremely heavy hearts, we regret to inform you that after Friday, October 25th, Cachet will no longer be able to process your ACH activity. Payroll companies associated with Cachet will now have to find another way to route funds to employees bank accounts, as the company will not handle any further wires, effective immediately. The company did not immediately respond to Gizmodos request for inquiry. In the last month, Cachet wrote off a $26 million loss to ma
stanley flasche ke good on outstanding payroll deposits left in limbo after MyPayrollHR shuttered, a loss its already suing the company to recoup according to a post on KrebsOnSecurity, a blog run by former Washington Post reporter Brian Krebs. With this weeks move, its likely Cachet will close down as well. MyPayrollHRs CEO Michael Mann was arrested in September a
stanley cup nd charged in a $70 million bank fraud scheme, NBC News reported. Hed allegedly been using the business to secure millions in bank loans and other lines of credit and reroute these funds to fake companies. When these fraud suspicions surfaced, Manns banks froze his accounts, forcing MyPayrollHR out abruptly out of business and sending its nationwide clients into disarray. He faces up to 30 years in
stanley vaso pri Dbpj South Korean Company Agrees to Pay Hackers $1 Million Bitcoin Ransom to Unlock Its Files
Ancient humans, likely a form of Homo erectus, occupied what is now the Shangchen region of China some 2.1 million years ago, according to new research published
stanley flask today in Nature. This area is about 400 miles 660 km west of Shanghai, but more importantly, its roughly 9,000 miles 14,000 km east of Africa, the birthplace of hominins. The discovery of 96 stone tools buried within 17 largely continuous layers of sediment, dating to between 1.3 million to 2.1 million years ago, suggests humans made their way from Africa to China longer ago than we thought. Prior to this discovery, the oldest known evidence of hominin activity outside of Africa was uncovered in Dmanisi, Georgia, namely tools and bones of a human species, possibly Homo erectus, dating back 1.85 million years. Other tools and fossils found in China and Java date back to between 1.5 million and 1.7 million years ago. But this new evidence breaks the two-million-yea
stanley quencher r barrier, a first for archaeologists working outside of Africa. The astounding discovery shows that so-called archaic humans were romping around Asia some 1.3 million years before our species, Homo sapiens, even existed. A t
stanley cup eam led by Zhaoyu Zhu from the Chinese Academy of Sciences in Guangzhou, China, uncovered the artifacts in the Chinese Loess Plateau. The researchers pulled out 82 flaked stone tools and 14 unflaked stones. The tools, which date back to the Early Pleistocene, were basic in their construction but diverse in terms of function, and