Over on Infosec.Exchange, Will Palant posted: Yellow Flag @[email protected] German law is making security research a risky business. Current news: A court found a developer guilty of “hacking.” His crime: he was tasked with looking into a software that produced way too many log messages. And he discovered that this software was making a MySQL…
Four-in-ten employees sacked over email security breaches as firms tackle “truly staggering” increase in attacks
Emma Woollacott reports: Nearly half of workers responsible for email security breaches over the last year have been sacked, according to new search, as cyber leaders begin taking a tougher stance amid a surge in attacks. Research from cyber security firm Egress found that 94% of organizations globally have experienced a serious email security incident…
Tilbury District Family Health Team confirms patient data impacted by October ransomware attack
CKXS reports: The fallout continues following last year’s ransomware attack that resulted in a massive data breach at five southwestern Ontario hospitals. The Tilbury District Family Health Team (TDFHT) has confirmed that its patient health information was impacted by the cyberattack on October 23, 2023, which also resulted in varying amounts of patient and staff…
CISA pushes federal agencies to patch Citrix RCE within a week
Sergiu Gatlan reports: Today, CISA ordered U.S. federal agencies to secure their systems against three recently patched Citrix NetScaler and Google Chrome zero-days actively exploited in attacks, pushing for a Citrix RCE bug to be patched within a week. The cybersecurity agency added the flaws to its Known Exploited Vulnerabilities Catalog today, saying that such vulnerabilities are “frequent attack…
As hacks worsen, SEC turns up the heat on CISOs
Zack Whittaker reports: Over the past year we’ve seen Uber’s former chief security officer convicted in federal court for mishandling a data breach, a federal regulator charge SolarWinds’ security chief with allegedly misleading investors prior to its own cyberattack and new regulations that compel companies to publicly reveal materially impactful data breaches within four business days. It might seem like it’s never…
HMSA member data possibly compromised after data breach
Emily Cervantes reports: Hawaii Medical Service Administration employee information may be compromised after their vendor partner fell victim to a cyber attack. In early Sept. 2023, HMSA’s health management service vendor, Navvis, announced they experienced a data privacy event that compromised the personal and protected health information for former and current employees. Navvis immediately launched…