Described as “the most wanted cybercriminal in the world” by the F.B.I, Evgeniy, M. Bogachev has a $3million bounty on his head and a penchant for Bengal cats and leopard print pyjamas. Because what else is a nefarious cyber criminal going to wear when he’s busy doing hacking business? Read more on Esquire.
Category: Non-U.S.
Central Huron Health Records Snooping Case Prosecuted
John Chippa reports: A Justice of the Peace in Goderich has handed down the stiffest fine to date in Canada for a health privacy breach. A university student who was on an educational placement with the family health team in Central Huron has been ordered to pay a $20,000 fine and a $5,000 victim surcharge…
NZ: CYF ‘stuff-up’ fuels privacy concerns
Craig McCulloch reports: A Child, Youth and Family privacy breach is being brandished as proof the government cannot be trusted with people’s private information. The breach has been made public as the government faces a backlash over its plan to require agencies to hand over clients’ details if they want state funding. Kaitaia woman Kelly Stratton…
UK: Devon doctors’ surgery says sorry for data breach
C_Abbott reports: A Devon doctors’ surgery that attempted to improve its service for patients has seen its efforts backfire after a newsletter was sent out with patients’ email addresses on display. The security breach affected around 1,000 patients of Pembroke House Surgery in Paignton on Tuesday afternoon. Following the administrative error, the surgery wrote to patients to…
UK: ‘43,000 individuals’ possibly affected after ABTA web server hacked
TTG reports: The organisation said today it had become aware of “unauthorised access to the web server supporting abta.com by an external infiltrator exploiting a vulnerability”. The web server is managed for Abta through a third-party web developer and hosting company. “The infiltrator exploited that vulnerability to access data provided by some customers of Abta…
UK: Fine for lawyer who stored client files on home computer
A senior barrister who failed to keep clients’ sensitive personal information secure has been fined £1,000 by the Information Commissioner’s Office (ICO). Information belonging to up to 250 people, including vulnerable adults and children, was uploaded to the internet when the barrister’s husband updated software on the couple’s home computer. Some 725 unencrypted documents, which were created…