San Mateo Medical Center is offering current and former employees three years of identity theft protection services because someone they hired for their payroll unit failed to disclosed a prior conviction for identity theft and they didn’t discover the conviction until after the employee had access to payroll data. Although an investigation disclosed no evidence…
Chicago Yacht Club hacked
Shia Kapos reports: The Chicago Yacht Club has reported a data breach involving credit and debit cards of its high-profile members. “Regrettably, the Club suffered a computer security incident that may involve your personal information,” wrote Commodore Gerald Bober in a July 31 letter to members. Read more on Chicago Business.
AU: Privacy update: in for a penny, in for a pound — a warning for health service providers
DLA Piper writes: The Australian Privacy Commissioner has found that a suburban Melbourne medical practice has breached the Privacy Act 1988 (Cth) by failing to take reasonable steps to secure personal information in its possession. […] The Pound Road Medical Centre (PRMC) moved premises in 2011 and believed that all paper-based medical records had been…
French credit card users most at risk of fraud
From The Local: Bank card users in France stood the highest chance of being a victim of fraud compared to the rest of Europe, new data released this week has revealed. Experts say France’s adoption chip and pin technology has forced criminals to find other ways stealing money. Some interesting stats in this article in…
Ex-Citadel Worker Pleads Guilty to HFT Data Theft
Andrew Harris reports: A former Citadel LLC employee pleaded guilty to stealing data from the Chicago investment firm and high-frequency trading computer code from another company. Yihao Ben Pu, 26, who was first charged in 2011, today admitted taking the proprietary information from Citadel that year and to an earlier theft of trade secrets from…
South Korean clinics defy ban on collecting ID
Lee Kyung-min reports: Hospitals continue to collect resident registration numbers from their patients, defying a newly enacted law that bans private entities from gathering personal information. However, they say that they have no choice but to continue to collect the identification numbers from patients since they have no alternatives to distinguish their customers. They insist…