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Oh, that’s just one of Walmart’s four super agents.

Oh joy, it’s Wednesday! If you have yet to get into the holiday spirit, try cozying up near your overheating laptop with a cup of hot chocolate. Nothing screams “winter wonderland” more than a loud laptop fan.

In today’s edition:

Walmart. Who knew?

Ransomware factoid

AI two-step

—Brianna Monsanto, Vidhi Choudhary, Eoin Higgins

IT STRATEGY

A smartphone displaying the Walmart app, a Walmart truck, and lines of code.

Illustration: Morning Brew Design, Photos: Walmart, Adobe Stock

The comeback is always greater than the setback, even for a retail giant like Walmart, which was once late to the world of e-commerce—and is now making strides in the retail industry with AI.

Gone are the days when Walmart was only known for its low-price inventory and vast selection of products under one roof. Today, Walmart has been driving conversations around AI and how it can be deployed within the retail industry. The scale of Walmart’s tech ambition is significant, with Walmart Global Chief Technology Officer and Chief Development Officer Suresh Kumar saying this is “just the beginning” for the legacy retailer.

Walmart earned an advantage by being early to the AI race, Scot Wingo, CEO of ReFiBuy, an AI startup focused on solving problems for retailers using advanced AI frameworks, told Retail Brew.

Introducing Sparky and friends!BM, VC

Presented By Amazon Web Services

CYBERSECURITY

cyberattack

MB

Like a Pokémon with just the right number of experience points, the ransomware industry is expected to evolve in 2026.

That’s according to NetNordic Threat Intelligence Lead Analyst Santeri Anttila, who told IT Brew on the sidelines of the Live! 360 Tech Con in Orlando that the threat is growing more sophisticated as malicious actors gain access to tools like ransomware-as-a-service and initial access brokers, who are threat actors selling unauthorized access to corporate networks.

“Previously, there was only one group, and now there’s maybe more than 10 different specialized types of predators,” Anttila said.

Sami Laiho, chief research officer at IT company Adminize and speaker alongside Anttila at a Nov. 18 keynote on the state of ransomware, added attackers are hurling more double extortion attacks, which is when they encrypt stolen data and threaten to sell it.

“You basically extort it for two different types of attacks now, and usually both are done at the same time,” Laiho said.

The biggest misconceptions on the ransomware industry.BM

IT OPERATIONS

Illustrated uncertain man looks at four empty office chairs with a sign stating "hiring" placed on each one.

Erhui1979/Getty Images

Big month, big moves—let’s look at November in the tech C-suite.

An Apple shuffle redefines company’s approach to AI

Yes, this technically happened December 1, but we’re including it anyway. Apple announced a big shakeup in the company’s AI business, as SVP of Machine Learning and Artificial Intelligence John Giannandrea stepped down. Amar Subramanya will take over.

Apple’s AI efforts haven’t been as successful as its peers, CNBC reported, noting that the company’s Apple Intelligence platform has failed to gain traction among users. That’s due in part to less investment in the technology and Apple having its AI run on its own devices, rather than relying on the cloud to process workloads.

In leaving—he will serve as an advisor at the company until the spring—Giannandrea ends an almost eight-year stint at Apple. Before joining Apple, he spent comparable time at Google as SVP of engineering as well as stints as CTO at Metaweb Technologies and as chief technologist for Netscape, as well as other companies.

Wait, OpenAI and Google DeepMind hired who?EH

Together With Amazon Web Services

PATCH NOTES

Picture of data with "Clean Me" written on it + bottle of cleaner in front of it, Patch Notes

Francis Scialabba

Today’s top IT reads.

Stat: $11 billion. That’s the size of IBM’s latest acquisition of data infrastructure company Confluent. (the Wall Street Journal)

Quote: “I think learning to code is, it is maybe a bit like learning Latin is if you’re in the humanities or something. You’re never going to speak Latin, but it’s still useful learning Latin.”—Geoffrey Hinton, an AI pioneer, on why students should still learn how to code in the vibe-coding era (Business Insider)

Read: Surprise, surprise: AI is the new popular major on the block. (the New York Times)

Built for what’s next. Proven by what’s now: AWS AI runs billions of decisions across Amazon before helping enterprises do the same. It’s proven and scalable. Because it’s not theory when it’s already running the world’s biggest business.*

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