December 19, 2019 NOTICE OF DATA BREACH Dear Wawa Customers, At Wawa, the people who come through our doors every day are not just customers, you are our friends and neighbors, and nothing is more important than honoring and protecting your trust. Today, I am very sorry to share with you that Wawa has experienced…
UK: Email blackmail brouhaha tears UKIP apart as High Court refuses computer seizure attempt
Gareth Corfield reports: The UK Independence Party (UKIP) has suffered a data breach after allegedly having 143 party email accounts accessed amid demands made by blackmailers, the High Court in London has been told (PDF). UKIP is suing former party leader Richard Braine, former general secretary Tony Sharp and one-time party returning officer Jeff Armstrong,…
A Data Leak Exposed The Personal Information Of Over 3,000 Ring Users
Caroline Haskins reports: The log-in credentials for 3,672 Ring camera owners were compromised this week, exposing log-in emails, passwords, time zones, and the names people give to specific Ring cameras, which are often the same as camera locations, such as “bedroom” or “front door.” Using the log-in email and password, an intruder could access a…
SonyLIV Fixes leaky Elasticsearch in record time
Once again, a service owned and control by a division of official Sony Entertainment has slipped up. This time, their error exposed a elasticsearch server leaking log entries that feed into a third-party tool. Sony is no stranger when it comes to reports of poor infosecurity and hacking incidents, but it is not often we…
China Citizen Watch (Finally) Secures 150TB of Leaking Data
China Citizen Watch, the official Chinese division of the Japanese watch giant Citizen, and Bulova Watch Company (a Citizen brand in the U.S.) have both been affected because China Citizen Watch or its hosting company left an unsecured RSYNC server online with more than 150TB of files. Cursory skimming of the files, necessitated by Citizen…
Saudi hacker gives 19 students full grades, faces jail and millions in fine
Mariam Nabbout reports: A Saudi student hacked into his university’s system to change his classmates’ grades and is now facing legal trouble in the kingdom. This week, the country’s public prosecution recommended the young man receives a four-year jail sentence and a 3-million Saudi riyal fine ($799,804). The defendant, who studies at the King Faisal University in Hofuf,…