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Snow day!
To:Brew Readers
IT Brew // Morning Brew // Update
How data-center pros handle a blizzard.

It’s Monday! Super Bowl LX is over. Back II work. Get your Windows X upgrades over to Windows XI, maybe buy an iPhone XVII, and definitely sneak out of work early to get a slurpee at VII-XI!

In today’s edition:

Snow problemo

Disclosing time

Going for gold security

—Billy Hurley, Caroline Nihill

HARDWARE

 A snowy view of the generator yard at DataBank’s LGA3 data center in Orangeburg, NY (Credit: DataBank)

A snowy view of the generator yard at DataBank’s LGA3 data center in Orangeburg, NY (Credit: DataBank)

When a snowstorm barreled down the East Coast in late January, Jim Kozlowski’s data center team in North Carolina had a sleepover of sorts.

Fortified with stocked refrigerators and bedding, three to five technicians were ready to spend the next 48 hours checking generators, fuel lines, and other systems keeping the facility running.

If the data center went down, so would the servers and IT infrastructure of the large enterprises that Ensono supports all day, every day, even when it’s snowing hard.

“I can’t afford a second offline,” Kozlowski, Ensono’s chief sustainability officer and VP of data center operations, told IT Brew.

See how engineers shoveled out.BH

Presented By JumpCloud

CYBERSECURITY

A portrait of James E. Lee, the president of Identity Theft Resource Center

James E. Lee

We’re not sure if we should tell you all this, but…

There’s a “no comment” crisis in cybersecurity.

Despite laws in all 50 states requiring businesses and government entities to notify individuals of any breach of their personally identifiable information, the Identity Theft Resource Center (ITRC) has noticed that disclosures increasingly don’t disclose all that much.

In an annual poll, the ITRC found a growing silence among the compromised:

  • In 2020, “nearly every” disclosure shared details regarding the cause.
  • In 2025, seven out 10 notices lacked information about the compromise’s cause.

Over time, data breach notices have become less helpful, ITRC President James E. Lee told IT Brew.

Lee spills on why.BH

CYBERSECURITY

The Olympic rings appear in front of a mountain range, promoting the Milano Cortina Winter Olympics

Mattia Ozbot/Getty Images

Organizations providing services to the upcoming Olympic Games in Italy might not need to worry about landing a triple axel in figure skating, but they’ll face their own sweat-inducing challenge: making sure threat actors don’t take advantage of cyber vulnerabilities during the events.

In 2024, France reported more than 140 cyber incidents throughout the Olympic and Paralympic Summer Games, the Cyber Threat Alliance outlined in a 2025 report. Of those reported incidents, 22 successfully gained access to information systems, while the remaining 119 had “minimal or no impact.” France’s Cybersecurity Agency, Agence Nationale de la Sécurité des Systèmes d’Information (ANSSI), provided support to almost 500 companies and organizations involved in the Olympics.

Kristopher Russo, a principal threat researcher at Palo Alto Network’s threat intelligence and incident response group Unit 42, told IT Brew that bad actors during those Paris games carried out attacks against critical infrastructure associated with the Olympics, including distributed denial-of-service (DDoS) events.

“The idea is really to both embarrass the hosts and the host countries of the game, show unpreparedness, get everybody on edge, and then also to push these individual ideologies and viewpoints to get that into the open,” Russo said.

How to win the match.—CN

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: 77%. That’s the proportion of business leaders who say AI is leading their orgs to hire “fractional” workers over full-time employees, according to a US-based survey from freelance marketplace platform Upwork. (ZDNet)

Quote: “We were ready.”—Priscilla Rodriguez, senior vice president of college readiness assessments at the College Board, following an announced ban of smart glasses during the SAT (Inside Higher Ed)

Read: Here’s 31 things you can do with Windows 11. (PCMag)

Stop fighting AI: Lead it instead. Shadow AI is a governance challenge, not just a visibility one. Bind every AI tool to a managed identity with JumpCloud to enforce security and accelerate safe innovation. Learn more.*

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