From the tell-us-something-we-didn’t-know-already dept., Mark Gerlach reports: Although cyberattacks are becoming more prevalent, breach notification laws in the U.S. lack synergy, said the opening panelists at ALM’s Cybersecurity and Data Protection Legal Summit Tuesday morning at The Harvard Club in New York City. […] “I wouldn’t hold your breath for a national breach notification,” said…
More Trouble For Sony? PlayStation Servers ‘Used To Spread Stolen Data’
Thomas Fox-Brewster reports: Things could be about to go from bad to worse for Sony. Having been allegedly hacked by a crew going by the name of Guardians of Peace (GOP) and an alleged 27GB of data chucked on numerous peer-to-peer file sharing networks, it’s now emerged PlayStation Network web servers are being used to hand out…
FBI alerts U.S. companies of malware following Sony breach
Maritza Santillan reports: The Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) issued an alert to U.S. companies on Monday warning them of malicious software following the recent large-scale network disruption at Sony Pictures Entertainment. According to Reuters, the five-page confidential alert included details of how Sony’s attack was successfully carried out, as well as advice on how…
Target fails to end banks’ lawsuit over data breach
Jonathan Stempel reports: A federal judge on Tuesday rejected Target Corp’s bid to dismiss a lawsuit by banks seeking to recoup money they spent reimbursing fraudulent charges and issuing new credit and debit cards because of the retailer’s late 2013 data breach. U.S. District Judge Paul Magnuson in St. Paul, Minnesota said Target played a…
Belize City Special Branch Office flash drive containing thousands of files lost or stolen
7News Belize reports: 7News has learned that a flash drive belonging to a police officer in the Belize City Special Branch Office has made its way unto the streets. No one can say for sure whether the officer misplaced it or if it was stolen – but the loss is causing alarm in security circles….
Iran-backed hackers targeted airlines, energy firms: report
Jim Finkle reports: Iranian hackers have infiltrated some of the world’s top energy, transport and infrastructure companies over the past two years in a campaign that could allow them to eventually cause physical damage, according to U.S. cyber security firm Cylance. Read more on Reuters. UPDATE and CORRECTION: Reuters later changed their headline from “Iran…