Kim Zettner of Threat Level discusses the different views expressed at a seminar last week on whether data breach notification laws do any good. As expected, the upshot was “we don’t know” because there are not enough data, surveys may not be reliable indicators, etc. Of course, there is another way to frame the issue…
USAID.gov compromised, malware and exploits served
Dancho Danchev of ZDnet reportsthat the Azerbaijan section at the United States Agency for International Development (azerbaijan.usaid.gov) has been compromised and is embedded with malware and exploits serving scripts since approximately March 1. He also provides a dissection of the attack. There’s a YouTube video from AVG as well, although it’s either somewhat blurry or…
Telegraph.co.uk hacked, SQL injection (updated)
The HackersBlog crew, who had previously exposed vulnerabilities in a number of security vendor sites and a social networking site, now reports that they were able to exploit an SQL injection vulnerability to access The Telegraph‘s databases, including one that has 700,000 email addresses and passwords of those receiving the paper’s newsletter. Given how many…
Bits ‘n Pieces
In the justice system: Ehud Tannenbaum, the hacker known as “The Analyzer,” may be extradicted to the U.S. from Canada. A hearing is tentatively set for May 7. More. Karl Gallagher, who worked for a British Airways’ call center in the UK, has been jailed for 2 1/2 years after admitting he stole customer credit…
HK: File sharing error exposes police data on the internet
The South China Morning Post has a report that Sheung Shui police data containing sensitive information have leaked onto the internet through file-sharing software Foxy. Subscription required to read the whole story, but by now, I suspect most of this site’s readers can pretty much guess what happened.
Lost in the mail? 3,700 NYC employees’ Social Security numbers
Kathleen Lucadamo of the Daily News reports that documents containing the Social Security numbers of 3,700 members of the Office of Staff Analysts union went missing after New York City’s Office of Payroll Administration mailed them to union headquarters. The package, sent “certified, return-receipt mail” – never arrived. There is no indication as to why…