Cybersecurity
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Attorney General Dana Nessel is renewing her call for Michigan to pass a law requiring companies to immediately report data breaches to her office, which would allow for quickly alerting the public.
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Government security leaders are struggling. Cyber investments are lagging. Resources are being cut. The problem is getting worse. Let’s explore solutions.
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Flock Safety cameras have become an increasingly utilized tool for the bigger police departments across the state, from urban areas like Aurora, Colorado Springs and Denver to suburbs like Douglas County.
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This comes nearly a year after the school system learned of a data breach that exposed the names, dates of birth and Social Security numbers of nearly 1,000 students who attended Frederick County Public Schools schools in 2005-2006.
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The district's communications director said that the information was essentially posted to the Internet.
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The new security measures include high-tech equipment meant to address a recent rise in courthouse violent crime nationwide.
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The data breach was discovered after a Pennsylvania-based child welfare worker found a link on the internet to a client file, which should not have been viewable online.
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Last week, American Airlines announced a $6 million deal with technology maker Analogic for eight machines that will be tested at airports around the country. The airports have not yet been publicly identified.
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Experts stress that the best way to combat cyberattacks starts with individual users, so education and preparation are key.
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Officials have said the newly signed law will consolidate the cybersecurity authority needed to address agency silos and evolving threats head on.
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The replacements are being made as part of a routine maintenance plan to upgrade to the latest technology.
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Pro-net neutrality advocacy groups like Fight for the Future made unclear speculative claims that the FCC was being “intentionally misleading” about the facts.
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Officials move past traditional “kill it with fire” approaches and focus on the unmet business needs that are breeding shadow IT.
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When companies neglect cybersecurity, customers – and society as a whole – suffer. It’s time customers demanded better of corporations.
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Reality Leigh Winner has pleaded not guilty to the charge.
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As scammers target legacy tech, government agencies must get savvy.
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Government sites in Washington, Maryland, Ohio, California and New York have also had their home pages hijacked. The defacements began over the weekend and new ones were still being reported Tuesday afternoon.
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The epidemic used a variant of ransomware known as Petya, and it froze hard drives of tens of thousands of computers and left screen messages demanding that owners make a payment of $300 to unlock their data.
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The defacement is being investigated by the FBI and the U.S. Department of Homeland Security in coordination with the Ohio Department of Public Safety.
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The broad goal is to get new equipment in place for the relatively light off-year election in 2019 so Ohio is geared up for the 2020 presidential contest.
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The same pro-Islamic State message also appeared Sunday on the website of Brookhaven, New York.
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