I’ve been posting some of the U.S. Department of Justice’s attempts to justify their proposed amendments to cybersecurity laws. Here’s how the most recent post in their series begins: In the last of our series on the need for limited updates to laws enhancing cybersecurity while protecting individual rights, this post will describe a proposal that is geared…
Month: March 2015
Ca: Breach? What breach?
Peter Jackson reports: First they said they’re looking into it. Now they’re saying nothing happened. The day before he was cut from cabinet on March 12, former Services NL minister Tony Cornect denied there was ever a security breach at the Office of the Chief Information Officer (OCIO). The OCIO oversees information technology and security…
California Health Care Facility Breach Statute Updated: Changes Effective Now
Paula Stannard reminds us: As a result of recent breaches – including breaches of health information and information held by health insurers – a great deal of attention has recently been focused on state data breach notification requirements. Most States have general data breach notification requirements that apply to all data breaches, including those involving…
Despite Wave Of Data Breaches, Official Says Patient Privacy Isn’t Dead
Charles Ornstein of Pro Publica talked with Jocelyn Samuels, director of OCR. You can read his interview on ProPublica.org. Pretty much everything they touched on has been discussed numerous times on PHIprivacy.net, so you may not find anything new in the interview if you were a regular reader of PHIprivacy.net, but I suppose it’s still reassuring…
CA: Tutor in Corona Del Mar grade-changing scandal faces more hacking charges
The case of the tutor involved in hacking Corona Del Mar High School to change students’ grades is like a soap opera. Now AP reports that the tutor, Timothy Lance Lai, faces an additional 16 charges of computer access and fraud. Prosecutors say Lai pleaded not guilty to the new charges. A message was left for Lai’s…
Accused Russian hacker should pay defense cost, prosecutors say
Mike Carter reports: Federal prosecutors have taken the rare step of challenging the appointment of publicly funded lawyers to represent accused Russian hacker Roman Seleznev and have asked a judge to order Seleznev to reimburse the government for his defense. […] As proof, the government provided the court with photographs of stacks of cash and…