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What led to Nova Scotia’s privacy breach

Posted on April 21, 2018 by Dissent

CBC News has an update to a government leak incident noted previously on this site. This is a case where the government’s response to their security failure was to criminalize the behavior of the teen who downloaded what were freely available reports. When the public went up in arms over the government’s attempt to cast him as some master criminal, the government started to back off.  Now CBC News reports:

The privacy breach involving Nova Scotia’s freedom-of-information portal has led to a police investigation, put the government on the defensive, and garnered international attention and criticism.

Here is a timeline of events.

See the timeline here.  Kudos to David Fraser for representing the teen.


Related:

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  • Privacy breach leads to embarassing award for Nova Scotia
  • Nova Scotia government portal reportedly breached; under investigation
  • Nova Scotia Power Data Breach Exposed Information of 280,000 Customers
  • Complaining about Canada's alleged failure to extradite someone makes no sense when there's no request to extradite
Category: Breach IncidentsGovernment SectorNon-U.S.

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