Alex Scroxton reports: Supermarket chain Morrisons has succeeded in its appeal to the Supreme Court against judgments that held it liable for an insider data breach caused by a disgruntled employee. In its unanimous judgment, the Supreme Court said previous judgments had fundamentally misunderstood the principles governing vicarious liability in a number of ways, most notably because…
Category: Non-U.S.
Virgin Media facing lawsuit over exposed database
It’s Wednesday, so law firms continue to try to round up clients for potential class action lawsuits by making big noises about how much money a company might be required to pay out. Emer Scully reports: Virgin Media could be forced to pay up to £4.5billion to customers whose personal data was published online –…
IE: Data of 9,735 teachers shared after ‘phishing’ email breach
Katherine Donnelly reports: A data breach at the Teaching Council has led to personal information relating to 9,735 teachers being shared. The council, which holds personal data on 104,000 serving and retired teachers, has alerted those affected and said it was “not likely to result in any real risk to you in circumstances where limited…
Ca: Toronto residents’ data improperly shared with councillor’s office in privacy breach
David Rider reports: More than 7,000 Torontonians are being told their personal information was improperly disclosed to a city councillors’ office, the Star has learned. In a March 17 letter to 7,227 people in a program for senior citizens and disabled people who receive free sidewalk snow clearing, Vincent Sferrazza, a city transportation director, tells…
FSB Takes Down Top-Tier Marketplace, Arrests Admins
Gemini Advisory has a fascinating piece on the takedown of a top-tier marketplace and the arrest of its administrators. Stas Alforov and Christopher Thomas report that when the Russian Federal Security Service (FSB) reportedly arrested 30 members of a hacker ring that specialized in selling stolen card data, Gemini noted that a popular dark web…
Never-before-seen attackers are targeting Mideast industrial organizations
Dan Goodin reports: Researchers have unearthed an attack campaign that uses previously unseen malware to target Middle Eastern organizations, some of which are in the industrial sector. Researchers with Kaspersky Lab, the security firm that discovered the campaign, have dubbed it WildPressure. Read more on Ars Technica.