James Morris reports: An investigation has been launched after yet another data leak by Islington Council. On Sunday, it emerged personal information about penalty charge notices was freely available on the council’s parking appeals website. Information included scanned cheques, medical information to justify appeals – and even one person’s prison record. It is the council’s…
Author: Dissent
TalkTalk requiring upset customers pay contract termination fee after data breach
From the if-they-have-a-PR-firm-are-they-even-listening-to-them dept: TalkTalk is becoming the poster child for poor PR and how NOT to respond after a data breach. In today’s installment, the BBC reports that the firm will only waive contract termination fees if the customer has had money stolen from them. “In the unlikely event that money is stolen from…
National University Hospital of Iceland (Landspítali) sued over privacy breach
The Iceland Monitor reports: A Vietnamese national previously denied residence in Iceland owing to suspicions that her marriage was a sham will now be allowed to stay. Controversy has emerged over how the Directorate of Immigration received the information about the couple on which the previous decision to deny residence was based. According to the…
UK: ICO confirms issue of data breach compensation a matter for consumers to pursue with companies or via the courts
From Out-Law.com: The Information Commissioner’s Office (ICO) in the UK cannot force companies to pay compensation to consumers affected by a data breach, the watchdog has confirmed. On Monday, the UK’s culture minister Ed Vaizey told MPs in the House of Commons that it would be “a matter for the Information Commissioner’s Office and TalkTalk to decide…
Did China Just Hack the International Court Adjudicating Its South China Sea Territorial Claims?
Jason Healey and Anni Piiparinen report: Attribution for cyberattacks is said to be notoriously difficult, but sometimes context and timing are damning evidence. In July, the Permanent Court of Arbitration in The Hague conducted a hearing on the territorial dispute in the South China Sea between the Philippines and China. On the third day of…
Ex-Goldman Banker and Fed Employee Will Plead Guilty in Document Leak
Ben Protess and Peter Eavis report: A former Goldman Sachs banker suspected of taking confidential documents from a source inside the government has agreed to plead guilty, a rare criminal action on Wall Street, where Goldman itself is facing an array of regulatory penalties over the leak. The banker and his source, who at the time of…