Christopher Bing reports: America’s top law enforcement agents and spies are teaming up under one roof as part of a new federal strategy to fight foreign hackers, senior FBI officials said in an interview. […] “We recognize that for too long some of our primary foreign adversaries have felt they can compromise U.S. networks, steal…
Recover Our Youth notifies clients and guardians of data security incident
Recover Our Youth has posted a notice of a data security incident that does not specifically say there was a ransom demand involving exfiltrated data, but it sounds like they may have paid some ransom to get copies of data destroyed. Recover Our Youth offers residential treatment programs and group homes for behaviorally and emotionally…
These hackers have spent months hiding out in company networks undetected
Danny Palmer reports: A cyber-espionage campaign is using new malware to infiltrate targets around the world including organisations in media, finance, construction and engineering. Detailed by cybersecurity company Symantec, the attacks against organisations in the US, Japan, Taiwan and China are being conduced with the aim of stealing information and have been linked to an espionage…
Russia’s Fancy Bear Hackers Likely Penetrated a US Federal Agency
Andy Greenberg reports: A warning that unidentified hackers broke into an agency of the US federal government and stole its data is troubling enough. But it becomes all the more disturbing when those unidentified intruders are identified—and appear likely to be part of a notorious team of cyberspies working in the service of Russia’s military intelligence agency,…
It takes hackers 1 minute to find and abuse credentials exposed on GitHub
Paul Bischoff reports on an issue DataBreaches.net and Jelle Ursem recently reported on: data being exposed because of code left in public repositories on GitHub (see our report about exposed protected health information in No Need to Hack When It’s Leaking). Bischoff writes that Comparitech researchers sought to find out how long it took hackers…
Ca: Two Telus Health medical service providers pay ransom after 60K client files accessed
David Paddon reports: The Medisys Health Group and its affiliate Copeman Healthcare say they paid an unspecified ransom to retrieve personal information for about 60,000 clients after detecting a security breach on Aug. 31. An email from Medisys head office in Montreal says privacy officials were notified Sept. 4, four days after the breach was…