Ina Steiner reports: In what appears to be a major breach of customer privacy, eBay is exposing customers’ real first and last names, as well as the items they’ve purchased, publicly on Google. While the idea that your real name is exposed in a product review you left for a benign product like clothing or…
National Capital Poison Center discloses ransomware incident
One of the reasons DataBreaches.net has never confined its reporting and analyses to HIPAA-covered entities is that there are so many other types of entities that collect and store health or medical information. Today’s example comes from the National Capital Poison Center, who found themselves in the unenviable position of reporting a ransomware attack that…
Jeffree Star’s Private Info Just Got Hacked And Leaked Online
I’ve said it before and I’ll say it again and again….. celebrities do not waive all their rights to privacy by being celebrities. And as I’ve also often said: even “small” breaches – breaches involving one person or a few – matter. Seen in my news searches today: Jeffree Star was the victim of a…
WI: After computer hack, Nashotah pays $2K ransom for residents’ personal information
Steven Martinez reports: The village recently paid an unidentified hacker a $2,000 ransom to decrypt its computer system after a hack in late November that left some residents’ personal information exposed. Village President Richard Lartz said Thursday, Dec. 7, that the hack “totally encrypted” Nashotah’s computer files, making them inaccessible to staff. He said the only information that…
What were the worst health data breaches in 2017?
I’ve been working on compiling some annual statistics for 2017 for Protenus. This will be their second year of publishing an annual report for U.S. breaches involving health data, and I think readers will find some surprises in the statistics. Sometimes numbers do not match our impressions. But as I was working on entering and…
Biometrics Won’t Solve Our Data-Security Crisis
Eduard Goodman of CyberScout writes: The history of proving one’s identity with official documentation dates back 600 years to the realm of King Henry V in England. Prior to that, your name and local reputation was pretty much all you needed to prove who you were. The Safe Conducts Act of 1414 created the first…