WKOW reports: Officials with Dean Health Plan say protected health data for nearly 1,000 members may have been breached after some documents sent to a bank were lost in transit. They say the affected documents included member identification numbers, member names, and procedure codes – no Social Security numbers or other financial information. Read…
Month: November 2015
Massive Hack of 70 Million Prisoner Phone Calls Indicates Violations of Attorney-Client Privilege
Jordan Smith and Micah Lee report: An enormous cache of phone records obtained by The Intercept reveals a major breach of security at Securus Technologies, a leading provider of phone services inside the nation’s prisons and jails. The materials — leaked via SecureDrop by an anonymous hacker who believes that Securus is violating the constitutional rights of inmates — comprise over…
NZ: Police go to PM over hacker “Rawshark’s” identity
David Fisher reports: John Key was approached by police about his claimed knowledge of the identity of the hacker “Rawshark” but won’t say if he cooperated. The approach came after the Prime Minister said publicly he had been given the name of a person who was said to be the hacker Rawshark. If you’re as…
Google, Apple Remove InstaAgent App Due To Password Snooping
Lord Marin writes: Apple (NASDAQ: AAPL) and Google (NASDAQ: GOOGL) have removed InstaAgent, an app for Instagram, because of its malicious behaviour. It was storing and sending the passwords of its users to a third-party server. The app’s advertised function was that it could track who visits an Instagram user’s account. It garnered many downloads…
TX: Employee with “retaliatory agenda” stole potentially 16,000 children’s medical records
HIPAA Journal reports: An investigation conducted by Children’s Medical Clinics of East Texas has revealed a former employee took copies of children’s medical records and disclosed them to a third party. According to the breach report posted on the healthcare provider’s website, the privacy breach was caused by an individual with “a retaliatory agenda against…
E-health opt-out records a ‘huge invasion of privacy’
Corinne Reichert reports: The Australian Privacy Foundation has accused the Senate of being “dangerously naive” in thinking that opt-out e-health records could be secured against breaches of privacy. Bernard Robertson-Dunn, a member of the Privacy Foundation who has also constructed IT systems for several government departments, said it is “patently absurd” for the Senate inquiry…