In a follow-up to a case reported in September, Robert McMillan reports: A former Massachusetts prison inmate has been given an 18-month prison sentence for hacking prison computers while he was incarcerated. Francis “Frank” Janosko, 44, was sentenced Tuesday in federal court in Boston for abusing a computer provided by the Plymouth County Correctional Facility….
Citigroup, law enforcement refute cyber heist report
Jeremy Kirk and Robert McMillan report: Citigroup and a federal law enforcement source on Tuesday refuted a claim that the bank’s customers lost millions of dollars in an advanced cyber heist over the summer, leaving lingering questions over details of the alleged attack. […] A source within federal law enforcement who declined to be identified…
Invisible Bracelet and its privacy policy
Perhaps you saw the news headlines this week about the “Invisible Bracelet.” Lauran Neergaard of Associated Press reports: Emergency health alerts for the Facebook generation? The nation’s ambulance crews are pushing a virtual medical ID system to rapidly learn a patient’s health history during a crisis — and which can immediately text-message loved ones that…
Doctor alleges second person also changed patients' records in WDH privacy breach
Adam D. Krause remains all over this story: A doctor impacted by the privacy breach at Wentworth-Douglass Hospital says a second employee improperly accessed and changed patients’ records but never lost her job. “There was another woman that’s still working at the hospital,” said Dr. Cheryl Moore, whose Piscataqua Pathology Associates group was contracted to…
WSJ reports Citi’s denial (updated)
David Enrich of the WSJ reports: Citigroup Inc. denied a report in The Wall Street Journal that federal authorities are investigating the theft of tens of millions of dollars from customer accounts by hackers, and sought to reassure clients that their funds are safe. The New York financial company sent employees in U.S. bank branches…
Former Morgan Stanley Coder Gets 2 Years in Prison for TJX Hack
Kim Zetter reports that TJX hacker and Albert Gonzalez accomplice Stephen Watt was sentenced today to two years for his role in what the feds are calling “the largest identity theft in our Nation’s history.” Read more on Threat Level.