Liverpool Echo reports: A jobless computer hacker was jailed today for eight months after launching a mass cyber attack on The Met Police, Tory Party and British Airways websites – from his bedroom in his parents’ house. Ian Sullivan, 51, flooded the internet servers for police forces, councils, charities and even porn sites as part…
Month: November 2015
AU: TAFE hack: Student ‘sex assault and bullying’ details hacked in IT breach
Amy Remeikis reports that despite early assurances from the government that all information was “low-level,” the TAFE breach (noted previously on this blog) included some sensitive information such as sex assault and bullying complaints: “However, in relation to records deemed to be of a more sensitive nature, the department needed to contact 16 people to alert…
Q3 2015 Data Breach QuickView Report – A Record Breaking Year in the Making
From Risk Based Security: Risk Based Security is pleased to announce the release of the Q3 Data Breach QuickView report. It has been a busy year in terms of activity, with over 3,000 data breaches reported in the first three quarters of 2015. The higher than usual breach activity began early with the first quarter…
Hacker claims Comcast breach linked to unpatched Zimbra vulnerability noted by NullCrew
There’s a new claim in the Comcast breach first reported by Steve Ragan. Darren Pauli reports that a hacker claiming responsibility for the breach notes that it was NullCrew’s hack and taunting of Comcast in 2014 that set the stage for the theft of hundreds of thousands of users’ information. Well, that and Comcast’s failure to…
Oz railway lets newspaper photograph train keys
Richard Chirgwin reports: Police are now saying that yesterday’s Melbourne train-heist-and-wreck was possible because miscreants bought stolen keys online. The vandalism, the cost of which is now estimated at AU$3 million rather than the original $2 million, involved people getting into an idle train at Hurstbridge station, starting it, and taking it on a 50-metre…
FastMail falls over as web service extortionists widen attacks and up their prices
Although the DDoS attack and extortion demand made on ProtonMail was the first to draw a lot of media attention – possibly because ProtonMail paid the demand – Hushmail, Runbox, Zoho, and VFEMail were also hit with DDoS attacks, seemingly by the hackers who call themselves the Armada Collective. Neomailbox was also hit, and now Iain Thompson reports that FastMail was hit, too:…