Australian Associated Press reports: A recent data breach at Perth Mint saw hackers take the personal details of about 3200 customers, far more than initially suspected, but investors have been assured their investment remains safe and secure. The mint said earlier this month the breach occurred on the system of a third-party technology provider and…
Category: Business Sector
Russian spies detained in The Hague were planning cyber break-in at Swiss lab: NRC
DutchNews.nl reports: European intelligence services, including the Dutch military intelligence and security service MIVD, detained two Russian spies in The Hague earlier this year on suspicion of planning a computer break-in at a Swiss lab, the NRC and the Swiss paper Tages- Anzeiger revealed on Thursday night. The two men were preparing to travel to…
Banks Turn to the Courts for Data Breach Claims
Dawn Causey, Thomas Pinder and Andrew Doersam write: Banks frequently absorb fraud losses when the consumer is compensated for damage done by other sectors. When retailers with questionable security protocols are breached, banks support the customer throughout the fraud cycle: consumer outreach and notification, card reissuance, enhanced transaction monitoring and reassurance that the bank’s systems…
Hacker exploits EOS smart contract to steal $200K from gambling app
David Canellis reports: A million-dollar EOS gambling dApp suffered a major blow, just days after declaring itself to be the safest of its kind. Hackers have taken 40,000 EOS ($200,000) from the operating wallet of EOSBet by exploiting vulnerabilities in its smart contracts. “[…] A few hours ago, we were attacked, and about 40,000 EOS…
UK: Npower warns of breach that exposed personal details of 5,000 customers
Carly Page reports: Energy giant Npower has admitted that a security screw-up saw the personal details of some 5,000 customers shared via post. While there doesn’t appear to be a warning on the company’s website or social media channels, the BBC reports that Npower is “urgently investigating” the incident, which saw customers’ details shared in…
Cloud data management firm Veeam exposes 200GB of data on AWS instance
Duncan Riley reports: Cloud data management company Veeam Software Inc. is the latest of many companies to expose customer data via a misconfigured cloud instance, with 200 gigabytes of data relating to more than 440 million customer records found online. Detailed by security researcher Bob Diachenko, the leak of the data was discovered on a MongoDB database…