Elise Viebeck reports: A co-chairman of the House Cybersecurity Caucus is planning to introduce a data breach bill that would not create federal security standards for private companies. Rep. Jim Langevin (D-R.I.) announced that he will release two cyber-related measures on Thursday: one to require companies to disclose data breaches to affected customers within 30…
Category: U.S.
Allegations of Indirect Access Held Insufficient To State Claim Under CFAA – Court
David J. Clark of Epstein Becker & Green, P.C., writes: On March 20, 2015, a California federal court rejected an expansive reading of the Computer Fraud and Abuse Act (“CFAA”) urged by two plaintiff corporations that sought to hold a competitor and two of its directors liable under the CFAA, under an agency theory, for the actions…
FL: Federal Jury Finds Husband And Wife Guilty Of Operating A Clinic To Defraud Medicare
Here’s another case where patients knowingly participated in a Medicare fraud scheme, so I wouldn’t consider them victims (even though law enforcement never seems to prosecute them as criminals or co-conspirators). I think that the real victims here were the doctors whose identity information was misused to support the scheme and the insurance carrier who paid…
SC: Ex-Williamsburg County sheriff sentenced in $11 million ID theft scam
There’s a follow-up to a case that had puzzled me when I first noted it in September last year as it involved the fraudulent creation of ID theft victim reports to get Equifax to forgive debts. People had no idea that victim reports were being created in their names. Rod Overton reports: United States Attorney Bill…
LA: Student Hacker Changes Dozens of Grades
John Johnson reports: At Beau Chene High School in Louisiana this year, you could study diligently to raise your grades—or else just know a hacker described by a classmate as “a cool dude.” The cool dude, an unidentified senior, managed to get into the school’s computer system to change dozens of grades, reports the Daily World….
Data breach bill moves forward in the House
Elise Viebeck reports: Legislation to create a national data security and breach notification standard moved forward Wednesday over objections from Democratic lawmakers. The House Energy and Commerce Subcommittee on Trade approved the bill by voice vote after a markup that saw five Democratic amendments rejected along party lines. The bill from Reps. Marsha Blackburn (R-Tenn.)…