Brent Kendall reports: The Federal Trade Commission is offering a strong defense of its powers to police cybersecurity practices against a challenge by Wyndham Worldwide Corp. We wrote about Wyndham’s challenge earlier this month in a case involving attacks by hackers on the hotel chain’s computer systems between 2008 and 2010. The FTC sued Wyndham last year…
Month: May 2013
Council’s sensitive documents found at tip
Radio New Zealand reports: Confidential documents and other sensitive financial papers from the Buller District Council have been found dumped at a tip and the mayor admits it is a drastic mistake. Westport woman Jenny Thomas came across the pile of paperwork while looking for glass bottles at the tip at Karamea last Thursday. Ms…
HITRUST confirms a public server was hacked, but no sensitive data involved
Given how many claimed hacks are just — well, let’s just call them flat-out lies — more entities are starting to adopt a verify/confirm first before publishing approach. Or they’re publishing and then trying to confirm – a less desirable approach, in my opinion. Adopting the latter approach, Softpedia reached out to HITRUST after hackers…
Australian government brings on mandatory data breach notification
Josh Taylor reports: After close to five years of work, the Australian government will introduce mandatory data breach notification legislation into parliament, but the laws would be unlikely to take effect until sometime next year if they make it through parliament before the September 14 federal election. Read more on ZDNet.
Ca: BCCA denies access to patient information to further class proceeding
All About Information writes: Yesterday, the Court of Appeal for British Columbia vacated an order that required non-party physicians to provide a class action plaintiff with the contact information of patients who were potential class members. It rendered a principled judgement on physician-patient confidentiality Read more about the decision in Logan v. Hong on All…
Ca: Hospital apologizes for data breach
Karen McKinley reports: Thunder Bay Regional Health Sciences Centre has confirmed a privacy breach involving diagnostic images, but are providing few details as to who was involved. Hospital CEO Andree Robichaud and chief of staff Dr. Gordon Porter said Monday that the MRI scans of about 500 people were shared with a physician outside the…