Cybersecurity
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Bryce Bailey, deputy state CISO, has been tapped to be interim CISO in the Cornhusker State following the departure of Abby Eccher-Young. The state is also looking to hire a new chief data officer.
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Tulsa International Airport recently suffered a ransomware attack, a spokeswoman confirmed. The facility is independent of the city of Tulsa, which suffered its own such incident in early 2019.
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City officials are trying to determine the full extent of systems impacted by a ransomware attack, which paralyzed phone and computer systems in multiple departments beginning early Wednesday.
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Twenty-five percent of respondents are planning to move their data outside the U.S., and security is the top concern of 96 percent of those surveyed.
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As a result of these disclosures, terrorists and their support networks now have a better understanding of our collection methods, officials say.
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The N.C. Department of Health and Human Services has blamed human error in computer programming and its quality assurance process for the mistake.
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The first-come, first-served incentive targets companies less than five years old to bolster an emerging industry.
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Though it could free human screeners to focus on detecting suspicious behavior, some say it could also dull the screeners' senses.
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More than 450,000 individuals could be affected, but so far, there has been no evidence of theft or misuse.
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The combination of FireEye's threat-detection technology and Mandiant's ability to react to breaches allows the company to "go from alert to fix, almost immediately."
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In the past year, their agenda has taken on a global dimension with the revelations of fugitive NSA leaker Edward Snowden.
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A symbolic resolution declares that individuals worldwide have the right to online privacy.
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Group says fundamental values have been eroded by the surveillance activities of the NSA.
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In the first legal setback to a controversial program that records data on nearly all calls to or from the U.S., a federal judge ruled Monday that the NSA practice may be unconstitutional.
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Report points out that cybercriminal activities are becoming more difficult to track and more complex to solve.
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Leading Internet companies are beefing up their digital defenses in response to reports about NSA tracking of online communications.
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Privacy advocates argue that the companies asking for government reforms are "digital hypocrites," as they collect the same kind of personal data as the NSA does.
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The bank that manages the debit card system for unemployment benefits in Maine was hacked, potentially affecting 1,300 people.
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Police departments around the country use cellphone data requests, called "cell tower dumps," to track and prosecute criminals.
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The computer breach covers multiple states, and 14,335 accounts were exposed in Connecticut.
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Amazon’s making headlines for its commercial drone plans, but it’s not the first organization to go that route.
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