Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:jsteele wrote:Anonymous wrote:Rs not liking hacking now, are they? Karma.
This is not even hacking. This is sheer incompetence.
Incompetence coupled with a lack of good security protocols and standards for storing personal data for a purpose that isn't explicitly covered by some existing protocol like PCI or HIPAA.
I think regulation is required around PII held by third parties, but obviously that's highly unlikely under the current Administration. I want to blame the company for incompetence, but this kind of thing is more common than anyone would like. I think having standards, best practices, and compliance requirements is the only way to avoid these kinds of things.
In theory they are subject to data breach notification laws in most states.
Anonymous wrote:jsteele wrote:Anonymous wrote:Rs not liking hacking now, are they? Karma.
This is not even hacking. This is sheer incompetence.
Incompetence coupled with a lack of good security protocols and standards for storing personal data for a purpose that isn't explicitly covered by some existing protocol like PCI or HIPAA.
I think regulation is required around PII held by third parties, but obviously that's highly unlikely under the current Administration. I want to blame the company for incompetence, but this kind of thing is more common than anyone would like. I think having standards, best practices, and compliance requirements is the only way to avoid these kinds of things.
jsteele wrote:Anonymous wrote:Rs not liking hacking now, are they? Karma.
This is not even hacking. This is sheer incompetence.
jsteele wrote:Anonymous wrote:Rs not liking hacking now, are they? Karma.
This is not even hacking. This is sheer incompetence.
Anonymous wrote:Rs not liking hacking now, are they? Karma.
Anonymous wrote:http://gizmodo.com/gop-data-firm-accidentally-leaks-personal-details-of-ne-1796211612
The whole enchilada, compiled by a large number of conservative organizations and compiled by Deep Root Analytics, was left entirely unsecured on an Amazon web server. 200 million voters.