Author: Luke Irvin and (c) Copyright 2019 IT Governance
Remember after last month’s relatively serene cyber security scene we said this wasn’t the beginning of the GDPRevolution?
July was bound to be a bounce-back month, but we couldn’t have expected the frighteningly high total of 2,266,042,039 breached records.
Granted, a big chunk of those come from a single incident – a mammoth breach involving a Chinese smart tech supplier – but as unimaginative football commentators say, ‘they all count’.
Let’s take a look at the full list:
Cyber attacks
- Tennessee-based hospice notifies patients and next of kin of cyber attack (unknown)
- ‘Silence’ hackers steal more than $3 million from banks in Bangladesh, Sri Lanka and Kyrgyzstan (unknown)
- Hackers steal names and Social Security numbers from Maryland Department of Labour (78,000)
- Croatian government targeted by mysterious hackers (unknown)
- Philadelphia Federal Credit Union confirms security breach (unknown)
- State-sponsored hackers breach Greece’s top-level domain registrar (unknown)
- Chinese job recruiting site hacked, with CVs for sale on dark web (160,000)
- Los Angeles Co. Department of Health Services email hacked exposing patient data (14,591)
- ME-based Penobscot Community Health Center says it was affected by AMCA hack (13,000)
- Japanese cryptocurrency exchange Bitpoint loses $32m in cyber attack (unknown)
- Crooks steal Bulgarians personal details and email them to local media (5 million)
- US telecoms company Sprint says it was breached via vulnerability in Samsung website (unknown)
- University of Alabama discovers 10-year-old account breach (1,400)
- Pennsylvania-based software firm and healthcare provider accuse each other of data theft (unknown)
- TX-based Wise Health reports data breach caused by phishing attack (35,899)
- OH-based Edgepark Medical Supplies notifies patients after a ‘password spray attack’ (6,572)
- Computer files at Bahamas’ Ministry of Tourism corrupted by virus (unknown)
- Taiwan’s 1111 Job Bank says online customers details were hacked by “tomholland” (20,000)
- South Carolina’s Midlands Technical College breached by virus (unknown)
- Hackers publish list of Discord credentials they accessed in phishing scam (2,500)
- Hackers breach SyTech, a contractor for Russia’s national intelligence service (unknown)
- Henry Co., GA, networks offline for five days after malware attack (unknown)
- Lancaster University students caught out in phishing attack (unknown)
- Alabama-based school says its systems have been wiped out, but won’t confirm whether ransomware is to blame (unknown)
- Hackers target the City of Concord Anson County and Lincoln County Sheriff’s office in overnight attacks (unknown)
- LAPD officers and applicants stolen by hacker (20,000)
- What’s been taken from your wallet? Capital One says credit card applicants’ data stolen (100 million)
Ransomware
- J’Syracuse? School District blames ransomware for power outage (unknown)
- Georgia court agency hacked in ransomware attack (unknown)
- Key Biscayne becomes third Florida city to be hit by ransomware (unknown)
- LaPorte, Indiana, government pays $132 after its systems crippled by ransomware (unknown)
- Humboldt State University radio station goes silent after ransomware attack(unknown)
- Hackers demand $2 million after infecting NY-based Monroe College with ransomware (unknown)
- Gila Co., AZ, experiences week-long disruption after ransomware attack(unknown)
- New Bedford, MA, and Syracuse, NY, governments also hit by ransomware(unknown)
- Lyon Co., NV, becomes latest US government to be hit by ransomware(unknown)
- Northwest Indian College suffered major file loss in Ryuk ransomware(unknown)
- Libraries in Onondaga Co., NY, hit by ransomware attack (unknown)
- FBI investigating after Collierville, TN, hit by ransomware attack (unknown)
- Tampa-based community radio station WMNF hit by ransomware (unknown)
- QuickBooks Cloud hosting firm iNSYNQ recovering after ransomware attack(unknown)
- Butler Co. Federated Library System working on its online system following a ransomware attack (unknown)
- Maitland, FL, dentist says five months of patient records encrypted by ransomware (unknown)
- New Haven Public School district has ‘restored all critical functions’ after ransomware attack (unknown)
- Mobile, AL-based Springhill Medical Center goes quiet after ransomware attack(unknown)
- Washington-based Grays Harbor Community Hospital still treated patients despite ransomware attack (unknown)
- Synology NAS devices hit by ransomware after brute-force password attacks(unknown)
- Kentucky-based non-profit health centre pays $70,000 after ransomware attack(unknown)
- University of Western Australia alerts former students about potential data theft after laptop theft (100,000)
- Two Puerto Rico hospitals report ransomware attacks (520,000)
- Steel plant Blastech becomes second Mobile-based organisation to be hit by ransomware this month (unknown)
Data breaches
- Chinese smart home vendor Orvibo involved in password dump (2 billion)
- Indian government website is leaking pensioner’s data; official says it won’t be fixed until 31 July (unknown)
- American Land Title Association informed of data breach (600)
- Chinese government leaves unsecured databased on the Internet (58,364,777)
- DNA testing service Vitagene left customer records online for years(3,000)
- K12 Inc. database of student data was left unprotected online (19,000)
- Former Desjardins president falls victim to identity theft after data breach (1)
- Canadian police sent an account of someone’s suicide attempt to the wrong people (1)
- Maryland Department of Education left students’ and teachers’ personal details on unencrypted database (1.6 million)
- Another massive database of victims from Evite data breach discovered (101 million)
- Hospitality tech company Aavgo left an unprotected server online for three weeks (unknown)
- University of Nebraska-Lincoln offering ID protection after laptop was stolen(900)
- Texas-based Clinical Pathology Lab informed that it was affected by AMCA hack(34,500)
- Employee at SC-based Medico Inc. left protected health info on unprotected database (300,000)
- Researchers discover massive data leak in a server belonging to unnamed Chinese company (4.6 million)
- More healthcare providers release details of AMCA data breach (939,050)
- Swedish cryptocurrency exchange QuickBit says it left database publicly available online (300,000)
- Tennessee high school students at risk after data breach at Higher Education Commission vendor (unknown)
- Isle of Man government ‘mislays’ personal data of home care residents (33)
- Browser extensions are causing data breaches at US-based healthcare software companies (unknown)
- Commission investigating Australian police informant accidentally shares her handlers’ personal details with underworld clients (unknown)
- YouHodler misconfiguration exposes crypto loan details onto the web (86 million)
- Security lapse at email marketing company FormGet exposes user-uploaded documents (43,000)
- Unprotected server at Brazilian financial services provider exposes customer data (unknown)
- National Australia Bank notifying customers after data service companies misuse personal data (13,000)
- Family who adopted a child were forced to move home and change names after lawyers accidentally shared personal details with birth parents (3)
- Third-party breach exposes personal data of students at Connecticut school(unknown)
- Vancouver tour company apologises after dumping personal information in recycling bin (unknown)
- Sephora says database of Asian, Australian and New Zealand customers’ personal data was leaked (unknown)
- ‘Procedural error’ as Glasgow council leaked details of low-income families(+30)
Financial information
- Arlington Co. says cyber criminals penetrated its payroll system (unknown)
- MYOB blames glitch after it sends payslips to the wrong people (220)
Malicious insiders and miscellaneous incidents
- Florida Department of Children and Family Services accuses employee of leaking sensitive data (2,000)
- Former employees at India-based Magnasoft Consulting accused of stealing data (unknown)
- Fired IT employee at Baltimore government gains access to sensitive areas(unknown)
- Attackers break into journalist’s home, kills her dogs and steal reporting records(unknown)
In other news…
This article is a re-post from IT Governance July 31, 2019
For additional information see: http://www.itgovernance.co.uk