Andrew Madden reports: Four groups representing survivors of historical institutional abuse have backed Interim Victims’ Advocate Brendan McAllister after a data breach at his office was attributed to a “procedural error”. A full review of how information is managed has been recommended following the breach that resulted in the identities of hundreds of abuse survivors being…
Category: Non-U.S.
Ca: Security lapses in eHealth system increased risk of cyberattack, says auditor
Arthur White-Crummey reports: After finding numerous security gaps on laptops, tablets and smartphones connected to the eHealth system, Saskatchewan’s provincial auditor warned they could increase the risk of cyberattacks like the one that compromised sensitive personal information late last year. Judy Ferguson’s office identified unencrypted devices, inappropriate security settings, unrestricted USB ports and untrained staff…
Irish firms pay most for cyber-attacks, European study finds
The Independent reports: Irish firms suffer the highest median cost in Europe from cyber-attacks, at almost €92,000, a major new survey claims. Cyber incidents and breaches cost sampled Irish companies €113m over a six month period, with one unnamed Irish company suffering total cyber losses of €17.8m. Read more on Independent.ie.
Ministry still tracing cause of Indonesia’s COVID-19 patient data leak
Antara News reports an update to a breach that first came to light when a data broker listed the data for sale on RaidForums. The Ministry of Communication and Informatics (Kominfo) currently continues to trace the reason behind the alleged hacking of a database containing information of the country’s COVID-19 patients that was circulated in…
PH: Digital rights advocates warn of FaceApp’s security breach amid terror bill
Reinette Tarinay reports: Amid the looming passage of the anti-terror bill, digital rights advocates warned netizens against using FaceApp. In a statement, Computer Professionals’ Union (CPU) said that FaceApp comes with ‘several risks and dangers’ especially since its popularity surged after Facebook’s alarming issue of duplicate accounts as well as the government’s awful try on…
Woman who deliberately deleted firm’s Dropbox is sentenced
Graham Cluley writes: 58-year-old Danielle Bulley may not look like your typical cybercriminal, but the act of revenge she committed against a company had just as much impact as a conventional hacker breaking into a business’s servers and causing havoc. As North Yorkshire police report, Bulley has been successfully prosecuted under the UK’s Computer Misuse Act…