Tampa Bay Times reports: A judge sentenced a Tampa woman to seven years in federal prison for her role in an identity theft ring that stole credit card numbers from stores at International Plaza, the U.S. Attorney’s Office said Tuesday. Authorities said Danay Crespo-Rodriguez, 25, was part of a credit card fraud ring led by…
Goldman says client data leaked, wants Google to delete email (update2)
Jonathan Stempel reports: (Reuters) – Goldman Sachs Group Inc said a contractor emailed confidential client data to a stranger’s Gmail account by mistake, and the bank has asked a U.S. judge to order Google Inc to delete the email to avert a “needless and massive” breach of privacy. The breach occurred on June 23 and…
Boston man charged in Twitter hack
SAN JOSE – Cameron Lacroix was charged today in San Jose with hacking Zendesk, a San Francisco company that provides helpdesk support to numerous companies, including Twitter, announced U.S. Attorney Melinda Haag and FBI Special Agent in Charge David J. Johnson. According to the criminal information, Lacroix, 25, of New Bedford, Mass., hacked into Zendesk’s…
Milford schools: Info compromised due to security breach
More on a previously reported breach. Milford Daily News reports: Students who receive Medicaid reimbursements may have had their personal information compromised because of a security breach at a billing vendor, the school district said. In a letter dated June 25 to parents, Multi-State Billing Services, based in Somersworth, New Hampshire, reported that a laptop had…
Dozens Of Restaurants Hit By New Payment Card Hacks
Jeanne Price reports: Phishing emails, lax security or a previously unknown software flaw could turn out to be the cause of the latest eatery data breach. This one hit a number of prominent restaurants in the Pacific Northwest after hackers gained access a Point Of Sale (POS) system created by Information Systems & Supplies (ISS) of Vancouver,…
KR: Executives at 3 credit card firms face heavy penalty for data theft
Chung Ah-young reports: About 80 officials, including former CEOs and executives, from three credit card firms face heavy penalties for the theft of customers’ personal information, the financial regulator said Wednesday. Former CEOs of the firms face heavy penalties equivalent to recommendations of dismissal, which means they will be banned from working for other financial…