Sam Combest reports: Nearly 250 University of Louisville faculty and staff have had their personal info stolen through the “Get Healthy Now” program. U of L reported in a mass email Sept. 11 there is no evidence the data was used for illicit purposes. The university identified 247 employees and retirees whose information was breached….
Ca: Health care worker wins lawsuit for being wrongfully accused of accessing patient records
Lisa Joy reports: An east-central Alberta woman feels vindicated after winning a wrongful termination case against a medical centre society where she worked as a receptionist. The woman claimed she was terminated without just cause and publicly humiliated. Red Deer Judge Andreassen agreed and awarded her $25,600 in compensation. The Consort and District Medical Centre…
UK: Npower warns of breach that exposed personal details of 5,000 customers
Carly Page reports: Energy giant Npower has admitted that a security screw-up saw the personal details of some 5,000 customers shared via post. While there doesn’t appear to be a warning on the company’s website or social media channels, the BBC reports that Npower is “urgently investigating” the incident, which saw customers’ details shared in…
UK: Children’s centre lost paperwork and mixed-up records
Gareth Dunning reports: A failing children’s clinic that lost vital paper work and mixed up medical records told a watchdog that expectations of its services were ‘unrealistic’. Woodview Children’s Centre in Widnes has been issued with a Contract Performance Notice and resultant Action Plan after an investigation by Healthwatch Halton revealed major concerns. However, staff…
NV: Personal info feared stolen after suspected break-in at Sparks facility for the disabled
Melissa Matheney reports: Capitol police are investigating a possible break-in at Sierra Regional Center in Sparks on August 17th, according to Nikki Haag, a spokesperson for the Division of Aging and Disability Services at the Nevada Department of Health and Human Services. Haag says they are concerned that personal, identifiable information and protected health information…
Cloud data management firm Veeam exposes 200GB of data on AWS instance
Duncan Riley reports: Cloud data management company Veeam Software Inc. is the latest of many companies to expose customer data via a misconfigured cloud instance, with 200 gigabytes of data relating to more than 440 million customer records found online. Detailed by security researcher Bob Diachenko, the leak of the data was discovered on a MongoDB database…