This is a follow up to this recent story involving Amazon and workers rights.
Investors of Amazon.com continued to lend their support to a shareholder proposal on freedom of association and collective bargaining during the company’s recent annual general meeting (AGM).
The proposal, put forward by an international coalition of responsible investors representing 3.5-trillion USD in assets under management (AUM), called for Amazon to undergo a third-party assessment reviewing the extent to which it has been living up to its promises to respect international labour standards.
According to Company filings that were published on Friday, approximately 32 per cent of votes were cast in favour of the proposal — the second-highest level of investor support for any of the 14 shareholder proposals voted on at last Wednesday’s AGM. Accounting for the large number of shares controlled by board member and former Amazon CEO Jeff Bezos, roughly 37 per cent of independent votes were cast in favour of the proposal.
This vote comes amid a number of recent concerning developments in Amazon’s relationship with its workers. A major British trade union, GMB, recently announced legal action against the Company in the U.K. over allegations of anti-union practices; in the U.S., a federal administrative judge ruled that CEO Andy Jassy violated federal law by making comments on unions.
These developments coincided with a surge in investor support for the shareholder proposal. In addition to the original coalition of 22 cofilers, the proposal was publicly supported in recent weeks by numerous major public funds and asset managers:
- the California Public Employees’ Retirement System (CalPERS)
- the California State Teachers’ Retirement System (CalSTRS)
- the Office of the New York City Comptroller
- the New York State Common Retirement Fund
- Norges Bank Investment Management (NBIM)
- Legal and General Investment Management (LGIM).
The proxy advisory firms International Shareholder Services (ISS) and Glass-Lewis also backed the proposal, despite management’s opposition.
Sarah Couturier-Tanoh, Director of Shareholder Advocacy for SHARE, the Shareholder Association for Research and Education, which led the investor coalition behind the proposal had this comment:
“Once again, shareholders have sent a clear message to Amazon’s board and management that the Company must do better in delivering on its commitment to workers’ rights,”
“Given the widespread support the proposal received, we expect the board to demonstrate — at a minimum — what it is doing to comply with international human rights standards and mitigate the labour-rights related risks shareholders are seeing.”
Another Day, Another Third Party Breach
Posted in Commentary with tags Hacked on May 29, 2024 by itnerdLate last week, ABN Amro Bank NV announced that unauthorized parties may have accessed the data of some of its clients after supplier AddComm was the victim of a ransom-ware attack this month.
AddComm, which distributes documents and tokens to clients and employees for ABN Amro, said in a statement that the hack took place between May 5 and May 17 and disrupted its services for a few days.
At this time, it is not clear what type of data was involved, and ABN Amro said it has no indication that the unauthorized parties have used the data of its clients and that the lender’s systems were not affected.
This comes in the same month that Banco Santander SA said that information of clients and staff managed by a third-party was accessed without authorization, and Deutsche Bank, Commerzbank and ING Groep were among dozens of companies to suffer from the MOVEit file transfer tool breach.
Meanwhile, the European Central Bank, which oversees lenders in the region, conducted a stress test to examine how banks respond to and recover from cyber attacks and observed the extensive use of outsourced functions as one of the main challenges impacting 88% of banks that claim they are at least partially reliant on service providers to operate their core banking system.
Dave Ratner, CEO, HYAS had this to say:
“The fact is that every exploit has to do one thing before it wreaks havoc: communicate with the threat actor controlling it. Identifying and thwarting that communication is the first, last and best chance an organization has to prevent an attack. Third-party breaches will continue to escalate and be a critical pain point for organizations of all sizes until true cyber resiliency implementations are put into effect and organizations have not just the operational internal visibility that they require, but also the capability to detect those telltale signs of a breach and imminent attack, early in the kill chain, and stop it before damage ensues.”
Emily Phelps, Director, Cyware:
“The recent ransomware attack underscores the critical need for proactive cybersecurity measures in the financial sector. To address these challenges, modernizing traditional SOCs into cyber fusion centers can enable real-time threat intelligence sharing and collaboration across institutions, fostering a collective defense approach. By integrating strategic AI-driven cybersecurity solutions, financial institutions can proactively detect and mitigate threats, ensuring the resilience and integrity of their operations.”
Third party attacks are a danger that every business needs to wrap their heads around. If they don’t, they’ll be the next victim through no fault of their own.
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