Sam Blackledge reports: Plymouth University lawyers are investigating a serious data protection breach which saw the salaries of more than 240 senior staff leaked. A confidential spreadsheet was sent to an incorrect e-mail address in error back in June 2015. The incident was reported to the Information Commissioner’s Office at the time, and no further…
Month: May 2017
IC3 Warns of Increase in BEC/EAC Schemes
The Internet Crime Complaint Center (IC3) has issued an alert describing a growing number of scams targeting businesses working with foreign suppliers or businesses that regularly perform wire transfer payments. These sophisticated scams are classified as business email compromise (BEC) or email account compromise (EAC) and use social engineering techniques to defraud businesses. Users and…
TheDarkOverlord dumps 180,000 patients’ records from 3 hacks
While thousands of their followers on Twitter seem to be eagerly waiting for TheDarkOverlord (TDO) to dump more tv films or episodes of popular series, TDO went non-fiction this morning, dumping patient/medical records from some of their hacks in the healthcare sector last year. All told, almost 180,000 patients had their personal information shared with the world. Two of…
Greater Manchester Police fined after victim interview videos go missing
From the Information Commissioner’s Office: Greater Manchester Police has been fined £150,000 after three DVDs containing footage of interviews with victims of violent or sexual crimes got lost in the post. The force sent the unencrypted DVDs to the Serious Crime Analysis Section (SCAS) of the National Crime Agency by recorded delivery but they were…
“They’re back:” Grey Eagle Casino hackers dump more data
Back in January, this site reported that Grey Eagle Resort & Casino in Calgary had been hacked and some personal employee data had been dumped. At the time, the hackers threatened to dump more data. The casino never responded to multiple inquiries from this site about the breach, but did confirm it to Global News. No explanation…
Hundreds of thousands of kids have identity info hacked from pediatricians’ offices
As Robert Lord of Protenus explains in the May issue of Compliance Today, pediatric patient data continues to remain not only vulnerable to criminals, but also quite valuable to them, in part because the medical records of these young patients provide criminals a blank slate upon which they can build a false identity. This—combined with the fact…