BEC takes aim at physical goods (including food). BlackCat ransomware activity increases. Epic Games settles an FTC regulatory case. The InfraGard database was pulled from a dark web auction site. CISA releases forty-one ICS advisories. Rick Howard interviews author Andy Greenberg. Rob Boyce from Accenture examines holiday cyber threats. The growing value of open source intelligence. Twitter says vox populi, vox dei.\n\nFor links to all of today's stories check out our CyberWire daily news briefing:\nhttps://thecyberwire.com/newsletters/daily-briefing/11/241\n\nSelected reading.\nFBI, FDA OCI, and USDA Release Joint Cybersecurity Advisory Regarding Business Email Compromise Schemes Used to Steal Food (CISA)\nColombian energy supplier EPM hit by BlackCat ransomware attack (BleepingComputer)\nEvents D.C. data published online in apparent ransomware attack (Washington Post)\xa0\nFortnite Video Game Maker Epic Games to Pay More Than Half a Billion Dollars over FTC Allegations of Privacy Violations and Unwanted Charges (Federal Trade Commission)\xa0\nHacker Halts Sale of FBI's High-Profile InfraGard Database (HackRead)\xa0\nCISA Releases Forty-One Industrial Control Systems Advisories (Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency)\xa0\nRussia\u2019s Wartime Cyber Operations in Ukraine: Military Impacts, Influences, and Implications (Carnegie Endowment for International Peace)\xa0\nHow open-source intelligence has shaped the Russia-Ukraine war (GOV.UK)\nFront-line video makes Ukrainian combat some of history\u2019s most watched (Washington Post)\xa0\nElon Musk Polls Twitter Users, Asking Whether He Should Step Down (Wall Street Journal)\nMusk asks: Should I stay as CEO? (Computing)\nElon Musk\u2019s Twitter Poll Shows Users Want Him to Step Down (Wall Street Journal)\xa0\nElon Musk\u2019s Twitter poll: 10 million say he should step down (the Guardian)\nLearn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices