Because BankInfoSecurity.com has been doing such a terrific job of trying to identify financial institutions affected by the Heartland Payment Systems breach, it’s easy to forget that there were other types of entities affected. The Contra Costa Community College District was also affected by the breach because it uses Heartland to process online fee payments,…
Congress heard us! (commentary)
I’m first working my way through the provisions in the stimulus bill that relate to breaches and notifications. One of the recommendations that I and other privacy advocates had made was central notification and disclosure on a publicly available web site. They heard us. Here’s part of the new law: (3) NOTICE TO SECRETARY- Notice…
It’s Symantec’s turn (updated with response from Symantec)
A hackers’ group has seemingly managed to embarrass another security vendor. After revealing that Kaspersky, BitDefender Portugal, and F-Secure all had vulnerabilities in their sites, the hacker has now reported a blind SQL injection of emea.symantec.com. It’s not clear from the report what kinds of information might have been accessible via the attack. Symantec.com has…
Wikileaks Forced to Leak Its Own Secret Info
Ryan Singel reports: What’s Wikileaks, the net’s foremost document leaking site, supposed to do when a whistle-blower submits a list of email addresses belonging to the site’s confidential donors as a leaked document? That’s exactly the conundrum Wikileaks faced this week after someone from the controversial whistle-blowing site sent an emergency fund-raising appeal on Saturday…
Jamey Heary Cisco Security Expert by Jamey Heary Previous Article Obama’s Electronic Health Records initiative could usher in a new wave of ID theft
Jamey Heary does not seem happy… […] And since we are starting basically from scratch here there are a few things that stand out as problems with the current stimulus bill as it relates to EHR. The first one is the Institute for Health Freedom (IHF) is warning the public that the economic stimulus bill…
UF notifies thousands of possible breach of ‘Grove’ computer system
From a University of Florida announcement: University of Florida officials are making every effort to notify more than 97,200 people that an intruder gained access to a computer system containing files with their personal information. The files included the names and Social Security numbers of students, faculty and staff who used the “Grove” computer system…