Breaches that involve health data generally will cost you more. Asia Fields reports: Washington State University learned a costly lesson after a hard drive containing the personal information of more than a million people was stolen from a self-storage locker in 2017. Now, the university is going to have to pay even more. In a…
Month: April 2019
Millstone man sentenced for hacking women’s accounts and then uploading their nude images
Vin Ebenau reports: A Monmouth County man will spend five years in prison for hacking into the private cloud based accounts of two women and then stealing lewd videos and images of them which he preceded to post on publicly accessible websites, announced New Jersey Attorney General Gurbir Grewal. Patrick S. Farrell, 37, of Clarksburg…
NY: Operator of Global Cybercrime Marketplace Sentenced to 90 Months’ Imprisonment
Defendant’s “Codeshop” Website Sold Troves of Stolen Credit Card Data and Bank Account Logins on the Black Market April 17 – Earlier today, in federal court in Brooklyn, Djevair Ametovski, a Macedonian citizen, was sentenced by United States District Judge Eric N. Vitaliano to 90 months’ imprisonment after previously pleading guilty to access device fraud…
ME: City of Augusta hit by computer virus, City Center closed
Keith Edwards reports: A malicious computer virus that hit the city overnight and froze the city’s computer network forced the closure of Augusta City Center Thursday. The virus, which officials said was intentionally inflicted upon the city’s servers, also shut down computers used by public safety dispatchers — but not the city’s phone system or…
Hacktivists attack UK police sites to protest arrest of Julian Assange
Hacktivism is seeing a resurgence recently, in no small part fueled by the arrest of Julian Assange. #Op hashtags for the UK, Sweden, and Ecuador signal the intent of the attackers. #Anonymous #FreeAssange #OpEcuador #OpAssange #OpSweden #OpUK #OpUS @your_anon_net @LorianSynaro and @Pryzraky took #Offline UK Police website. Sweden its also our target! You will be…
ME: Acadia Hospital mistakenly released confidential information of 300 Suboxone patients
Callie Ferguson reports: A communications official at Northern Light Acadia Hospital in Bangor mistakenly emailed the confidential names of 300 patients with prescriptions for Suboxone, a medication used to treat opioid use disorder, to an editor at the Bangor Daily News last week. In addition to their names, the list also contained the identities of…