Seventy Percent of Customers Say They’ll Bail after a Breach - but is it True?
A survey of consumers finds hardened attitudes about data breaches, with 7 in 10 saying they would stop doing business with a company that lost their data.
A survey of consumers finds hardened attitudes about data breaches, with 7 in 10 saying they would stop doing business with a company that lost their data.
A case related to breaches at the firm CareFirst could see the U.S.’s top court weighing in on the legal question of whether having your data stolen constitutes “harm” to individuals.
Statements mailed to state attorneys general suggest the breach - which saw episodes of Game of Thrones released early - affected a small number of people, not HBO’s millions of subscribers.
Consider $2 per lost record versus $1,200 per lost record. That’s the difference between what Hilton will pay to New York State versus what it will pay to EU regulators once the GDPR takes effect in May.
Driver’s license data on millions may have been stolen, while many more Brits were affected.
Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein claims that dark markets drive breaches. It’s an interesting idea - but also a dangerous one, and wrong.
The exact circumstances of the hack of Big 4 accounting firm Deloitte aren’t known, but evidence suggests the company was among many that fail to prevent leaks of sensitive data to cloud-based platforms like GitHub.
The Equifax data breach—one of the largest breaches ever made public—has the potential to be the catalyst for a major change in the way that courts look at the damage that data breaches cause to victims.
Equifax confirmed that a vulnerability in Apache Struts 2, patched in March, was used to hack into the firm and steal data on 143 million individuals. Is that the whole story?
The leak of data on U.S. veterans this week is just the latest to be tied back to insecure cloud-based storage. What’s going on? Let’s take a look.