Hackers have once again hit that all time low with yet another attack on a healthcare based website, infact its the parent website to the attack that was carried out just a few days ago by @LulzSecEurope who attacked cancer.gov which is controled and funded by NIH. The most recent attack comes from a hacker…
Attack on russia leaves 60+ sites hacked, thousands of accounts leaked
@TeamGhostshell have been at it again doing operations out of the public eye that has now amounted in yet another massive load of data from mainly Russian based domains. The leak has been posted in similar fashion to the past large breaches by @TeamGhostshell so there is plenty of mirrors. the leak has a main index file…
A Sandy-induced hiatus
Well, we made it through super-storm Sandy, but 90% of my area has been without power and current predictions are that it will be 10 days to get power, phone, cable back. Ugh. I drove 20 miles just to borrow a connection to post this. Double-ugh. I’ll be back when I can.
A Sandy-induced hiatus
Well, we made it through super-storm Sandy, but 90% of my area has been without power and current predictions are that it will be 10 days to get power, phone, cable back. Ugh. I drove 20 miles just to borrow a connection to post this. Double-ugh. I’ll be back when I can.
hackers hit new low, National Cancer Institute attacked by hackers
Today hackers have hit a new low with an attack on cancer.gov a website which gives information and links to services related to fighting and dealing with cancer related issues. The attack is on www.cancer.gov which is the National Cancer Institute. The attack was announced from twitter by @LulzSeceurope > OMG #LULZ https://Cancer.gov Databasehttps://pastebin.com/34r29f6c @AnonOpsSweden@TruthIzSexy @anon_central@Cyber_War_News @HackRead @LulzSeceurope also left a very short message in the…
What sense can we make of some statistics?
Here’s a useful example of why my eyes glaze over at times when trying to make sense of breach statistics. Tim Smith of the Greenville News recently reported: South Carolina state agencies and businesses over a three-year period reported dozens of computer security breaches that potentially could affect at least 410,000 people, a report obtained…