Reading view

There are new articles available, click to refresh the page.

No need to hack when it’s leaking: Dialog edition

Yes, another entry in our “no need to hack when it’s leaking” archives, and another example of entities trying to excuse their security  failures by claiming they were “hacked.” Danny Bradbury cuts to the chase: Some organizations exist to be exclusive. They’re invite-only, and discreet, the kind of place where the membership directory is the...

Source

67 million Thais exposed in massive data leak, parliament launches probe

Pattaya Mail reports: A civil society group has petitioned a parliamentary committee to investigate a massive data breach after a government agency leaked the national ID numbers and healthcare details of approximately 67.1 million people. Thanarat Kuawattanaphan, a software expert leading the group, submitted the petition to Alongkot Maneekat, chairman of the House Committee on...

Source

JP: Hokkaido hospitals data leak may hit 510k, HDDs sold online blamed

NHK News reports: Japan’s National Hospital Organization says hard drives from two hospitals in Hokkaido were listed on auction sites, resulting in a leak of personal information from at least 180,000 patients and employees. The group warns that the leak could potentially affect up to 510,000 people. Last June, the Hokkaido Medical Center — part...

Source

UK Visa Portal spilled thousands of applicants’ passports and selfies online — and hasn’t fixed the leak

Zack Whittaker reports: A website called UK Visa Portal is publicly exposing the passports and selfie photos of applicants who signed up and paid the site to obtain a U.K immigration visa, TechCrunch has learned. An anonymous person notified TechCrunch about the security lapse, saying that the website is exposing at least 100,000 documents from...

Source

No need to hack when it’s leaking: Dalbir Singh & Associates law firm edition

Dalbir Singh & Associates ignored multiple attempts at responsible disclosure but finally locked down its misconfigured Amazon bucket, only to expose it again. Now the data is in the hands of criminals trying to extort them.  On April 6, DataBreaches reported on a misconfigured Amazon bucket belonging to an immigration law firm in New York....

Source

US bank reports itself for revealing customer data to unauthorized AI application

Connor Jones reports: A US commercial bank just tattled on itself to the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) for plugging a bunch of customer data into an unauthorized AI application. Community Bank, which operates in southwestern Pennsylvania, Ohio, and West Virginia, filed an 8-K with the regulator on Monday, saying it launched an investigation into the internal...

Source

Thousands of DICOM servers exposed due to shameful lack of basic security measures

From the way-too-slow-learning-curve dept. Steve Alder reports: Healthcare organizations are exposing a vast amount of patient data by failing to implement even basic security measures for DICOM servers, according to a recent Trend Micro TrendAI analysis. TrendAI identified thousands of internet-facing DICOM servers belonging to hundreds of entities. The lack of security protections puts patient...

Source

Korea’s child rights agency data mishandling exposes a lot of sensitive and personal info

Jung Da-hyun reports: A recent data breach at the National Center for the Rights of the Child (NCRC), exposing sensitive personal records of adoptees, is drawing criticism from overseas adoptee groups and raising questions about the agency’s credibility. The breach, which the NCRC said occurred between April 30 and May 2, came to light when...

Source

Medicare portal database exposed health providers’ Social Security numbers

Dan Diamond and Clara Ence Morse report: The Trump administration inadvertently exposed the Social Security numbers of health care providers in a database powering a new Medicare portal, The Washington Post found. The Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) last year created a directory to help seniors look up which doctors and medical providers accept...

Source

Michigan residents sue Thomson Reuters over public display of Social Security numbers

Caitlyn Rosen reports: A class of Michiganders asserted in a federal lawsuit filed Thursday that a Thomson Reuters search engine wrongfully published their Social Security numbers. In an 11-page lawsuit filed in the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Michigan, the class claims Reuters search engines publicly displayed plaintiffs’ social security numbers in...

Source

Fitness tracking under scrutiny as Strava military data leak exposes personnel

Paulo Vargas reports: Your Strava runs might feel private, but a new Strava military data leak shows how easily that information can reveal more than your workout. In the latest case, activity logs have been linked to more than 500 UK military personnel, connecting everyday exercise to sensitive locations. This goes beyond visible routes. Shared histories and account details...

Source

❌