Depressingly, Bob Diachenko of Hackenproof writes: These days it’s quite easy for an ordinary person to get the contact details of any business or organization for a certain fee or subscription. However, should seemingly non-sensitive data be so easily available? 123GB of personal data exposed On November 5th, we discovered an open and unprotected MongoDB…
Month: November 2018
German flirting network gets fined 20,000€ for leaking user information
Nicole Lorenz reports Knuddels.de is a German flirting / chatting / social media channel. The network was hacked back in September and around 808,000 email addresses as well as 1,872,000 pseudonyms and passwords were leaked as a result. Now a couple of months later a German court decided that the company would have to pay…
MO: Woman sues SSM Health over alleged privacy violation
ABC17 reports a follow-up to a breach previously noted on this blog. A Holts Summit woman is suing SSM Health St. Mary’s Hospital after she claims it didn’t do enough to protect the privacy of her medical records. According to the lawsuit filed in Cole County, the patient, referred to as “T.K,” received a letter…
Happy Thanksgiving!
Happy Thanksgiving to those who celebrate this holiday! For those who will miss out on their family get-together because they are serving their community as firefighters, medics, police, soldiers…. thank you for the sacrifices you make today so that the rest of us can enjoy this occasion. As always, I am grateful for those…
Hacker lifts $1 million in cryptocurrency using San Francisco man’s phone number, prosecutors say
Kate Rooney reports: Losing cellphone service is inconvenient. But in some cases, it also might mean you’re getting hacked. San Francisco resident Robert Ross, a father of two, noticed his phone suddenly lose its signal on Oct. 26. Confused, he went to a nearby Apple store and later contacted his service provider, AT&T. But he…
Edmonton Humane Society apologizes after personal financial info ‘accidentally posted’ on its website
Phil Heidenreich reports: The Edmonton Humane Society issued an apology on Tuesday after it says the personal financial information of at least five participants in one of its programs was “accidentally posted on the organization’s corporate website for a short period of time.” Read more on GlobalNews.ca.