Tampa, FL – U.S. District Judge James S. Moody, Jr. today sentenced Michel Lermos-Hernandez (40, Tampa) to 16 years and 7 months in federal prison for conspiracy to commit bank fraud and aggravated identity theft. The Court also ordered him to pay $714,383.51 in restitution to his victims. Lermos-Hernandez pleaded guilty on March 2, 2016….
Category: Business Sector
Customers for more than a hundred car dealerships across the US were put at risk because of shoddy database security
Zack Whittaker reports: If you bought a car in the last few years, there’s a good chance your personal information may have found its way to the open internet. Names, addresses, phone numbers and social security numbers for both customers and employees for over a hundred car dealerships have leaked online, all thanks to a…
Cisco jobs portal exposed personal data
ITnews reports: Wrongly configured security settings in a Cisco portal used for job applications has resulted in the leak of personal data online. The networking vendor told affected individuals that a “limited set of job application related information” had been exposed due to botched settings in the mobile version of its professional careers website. It said the…
Security breach in shopping app AliExpress
Daniel Gilenson reports: A security breach was discovered in the popular shopping application AliExpress. In the last several days details of many users who requested to remain anonymous were exposed to anyone. […] On the website, anyone who writes a comment may remain anonymous but since the last update it was discovered that the…
CA: Former Davis apartment manager gets prison for ID theft
Lauren Keene reports: The former property manager for an East Davis apartment complex was sentenced to four years and three months in prison Thursday for committing identity theft and other crimes, the U.S. Attorney’s Office announced Friday. William Raymond Stanley Jr., 31, of Sacramento, was living at the Tuscany Villas apartments, 2526 E. Eighth St.,…
Web of Trust (WOT) Add-on taken down by Chrome & Firefox
Matthew Humphries reports: Browser extensions have become an essential part of surfing the Internet. They add security, useful extra features, and act as a testing ground for functionality that may eventually become a standard part of the most popular browsers. Not all browser extensions can be trusted, though, and an investigation by German TV channel NDR has uncovered…