Frank L. Cahill reports: Attorney General Matthew J. Platkin confirmed charges against a Boonton police captain who allegedly stole his internal affairs records and computer hardware containing police data from the Boonton Police Department. Stephen Jones, 42, of Toms River, has been charged with computer theft, tampering with public records, and other offenses in connection…
Asante Notifies More than 8,800 Patients Whose Records Appeared to Be Inappropriately Accessed by a Physician
Asante provides healthcare services in southern Oregon and northern California. On February 28, it issued a notice about an insider-wrongdoing incident. As they describe it on their site, they became aware of a concern that a doctor with admitting privileges, Dr. Paul Hoffman, may have accessed a number of patients’ records without a valid clinical…
AT&T Notifying some wireless customers of vendor incident
AT&T has been notifying some wireless customers of an incident involving an unnamed vendor. In a notice sent to a customer who shared it with DataBreaches, AT&T wrote: AT&T’s commitment to customer privacy and data security is a top priority. We recently determined that an unauthorized person breached a vendor’s system and gained access to…
Co-Working for the Ransomware Age: How Hive Thrived
Mathew J. Schwartz reports on how Hive blossomed as a business enterprise by co-working, or incorporating smaller victims and teams from Conti. Read his report with insights provided by Yelisey Bohuslavskiy, chief research officer at New York-based threat intelligence firm Red Sense. It makes for a fascinating read.
City of Waynesboro targeted in cyber attack
Anahita Jafary reports: Some personal information in floating around in cyberspace after a ransomware attack against the city of Waynesboro. The city’s manager, Mike Hamp, said in a statement they were notified of a potential cyberattack in January. It affected Waynesboro’s information technology infrastructure. Hamp declined to meet or speak with NBC29, but in the…
After newest data leak, lawyers say time for Putrajaya to give up PDPA immunity
R. Loheswar reports: Continued breaches exposing Malaysians’ private information at government agencies meant the Personal Data Protection Act (PDPA) should be amended to finally make these accountable, said legal experts. In its current form, the PDPA only covers commercial entities and transactions, exempting both the federal and state governments from its rules and principles, including…