Saturday headlines: Never melt better

The attack on Snowflake, which provides cloud services to multiple large corporations, appears to be snowballing into one of the largest data breaches ever. / TechCrunch, WIRED

Ikea is hiring employees—at a rate of just under $17 an hour—to work in its Roblox store. / The Independent

Unrelated: TJ Maxx, Marshalls, and HomeGoods are outfitting retail employees with police-like body cams. / CNN

How to avoid “languishing,” the internal alarm that begins ringing before burnout and depression hit. / GQ

“The idea of mountain country as the ultimate proving ground of human fortitude was now etched onto the modern mind.” Why humans want to climb mountains. / Noema

See also: Two women accuse celebrity mountaineer Nirmal “Nims” Purja, the subject of a 2021 Netflix climbing documentary, of sexual harassment and assault. / Outside

“It's too hot for cameras.” A heat dome is making Death Valley, the hottest place on Earth, even hotter. / Vox

See also: How an Antarctic research station produces freshwater and disposes of wastewater. / brr.fyi

“The reality is, most people do not want to eat like Alice Waters.” How the fridge changed flavor. / The New Yorker

The original painted floorboards seen on the cover of Syd Barrett's The Madcap Laughs album are up for auction. / Omega Auctions

Six months out from this year's election, neither Google nor Microsoft's AI chatbots will answer the question, “Who won the 2020 US presidential election?” / WIRED

“Steve still hasn't got around to reading Infinite Jest but, with no Internet to distract him, he undoubtedly will.” Life after the internet is gone. / The Villager

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