Paul Farrell reports: The Australian federal police have inadvertently disclosed the identity of two people involved in a criminal investigation, the second accidental publication of material about investigations this year. The identities of the two were disclosed in documents released by the AFP under freedom of information laws. Read more on The Guardian.
Month: December 2014
New detail emerges in NRAD data theft case
On December 4, after posting a press release from the D.A.’s office announcing the arrest of a physician for stealing PHI on 97,000 patients, I noted that we still had seen no statement about the physician’s possible motive. Now Marianne Kolbasuk McGee reports that the physician “told authorities that he accessed and copied the NRAD…
Liberian Facing 43 Years in Prison for Tax Fraud and Id Theft
Front Page Africa reports: In a pea (sic) appearance at Federal Court in Philadelphia on Wednesday, Gebah Kamara, a former worker at the Catholic Social Services pleaded guilty to all charges, including conspiracy to file false tax returns and theft. As prosecutors went to court armed with a mountain of evident (sic) against the Liberian…
Toward a Breach Canary for Data Brokers
It wouldn’t prevent breaches, but having data brokers incorporate dummy identities in databases (“canaries”) might make it easier to figure out when a data broker’s database has been compromised and when their stolen information goes up for sale on the underground, Brian Krebs writes. Getting Congress off the dime to do something about data brokers has…
Kaspersky drops deets on Sony hacker malware
Darren Pauli report: Kaspersky bod Kurt Baumgartner has released more details into the Sony-plundering malware and links it to attacks on Saudi Aramco and South Korea. Research conducted in the wake of the epic Sony breach last month had connected those behind the attack known as the Guardians of Peace (GOP) with the 2012 hacking of Saudi Aramco by…
Sentinel newsroom burglarized, computers stolen
The Santa Cruz Sentinel reports: Burglars broke into the Santa Cruz Sentinel office at 1800 Green Hills Road on Saturday morning and stole computer laptops. Read more here. They don’t report whether there was any confidential material or material from sources on any of the laptops, and if so, whether the data were encrypted.