Jonathan Stempel reports: A federal judge on Tuesday rejected Target Corp’s bid to dismiss a lawsuit by banks seeking to recoup money they spent reimbursing fraudulent charges and issuing new credit and debit cards because of the retailer’s late 2013 data breach. U.S. District Judge Paul Magnuson in St. Paul, Minnesota said Target played a…
Month: December 2014
Belize City Special Branch Office flash drive containing thousands of files lost or stolen
7News Belize reports: 7News has learned that a flash drive belonging to a police officer in the Belize City Special Branch Office has made its way unto the streets. No one can say for sure whether the officer misplaced it or if it was stolen – but the loss is causing alarm in security circles….
Iran-backed hackers targeted airlines, energy firms: report
Jim Finkle reports: Iranian hackers have infiltrated some of the world’s top energy, transport and infrastructure companies over the past two years in a campaign that could allow them to eventually cause physical damage, according to U.S. cyber security firm Cylance. Read more on Reuters. UPDATE and CORRECTION: Reuters later changed their headline from “Iran…
American Residuals and Talent (ART Payroll) notifying employees of hack
Oregon-based American Residuals and Talent, Inc. (“ART”) (ART Payroll) is notifying former and current clients’ employees of a data breach. Emily Erskine, President of ART, writes: On October 18, 2014, we detected an unauthorized login onto our web application. We worked immediately to contain the unauthorized access and prevent it from happening again. The unauthorized…
Not all medical data is protected by HIPAA, Tuesday reminder (updated)
The Sony Pictures breach, which normally wouldn’t be covered on this blog, serves as a useful reminder of how much medical and/or health insurance information employers hold on employees – information that you wouldn’t want in the hands of hackers. See Brian Kreb’s post today on the Sony breach. The linked file tree directory is concerning….
Sony Breach May Have Exposed Employee Healthcare, Salary Data
Brian Krebs reports: The recent hacker break-in at Sony Pictures Entertainment appears to have involved the theft of far more than unreleased motion pictures: According to multiple sources, the intruders also stole more than 25 gigabytes of sensitive data on tens of thousands of Sony employees, including Social Security numbers, medical and salary information. Several files being…