Have you heard that Troy Hunt's popular data breach and record exposure search engine Have I Been Pwned is going open source? . Developed and maintained by security expert Troy Hunt, the search engine has become increasingly popular over time as the volume of reported data breaches ramped up, prompted by legislation and demands for transparency by companies suffering such a security incident. When data breaches occur, financial records, sensitive corporate information, as well as personally identifiable information (PII) belonging to customers and clients, may be compromised or stolen. Data sets often appear for sale in the Dark Web for the purposes of card cloning or identity theft. . The widely recognized data exposure research tool by Troy Hunt is set to become open source, boosting both security visibility and collaborative efforts within the community.. Open Source, Data Breach, Security Tool, Code Exposure, Cybersecurity. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
A COUPLE of 16-year old hackers had their wicked way exploiting a security vulnerability recently that allowed one of them to steal and publish a PHP cloud hosting firm's proprietary source code on Twitter.. On his company's blog, PHP Fog founder and CEO Lucas Carlson described how an Australian called 'Eliot' and an American called 'John' embarked on a competition to see who could deface Carlson's website the fastest. Carlson said that 'John' gave instructions to 'Eliot' to break into PHP Fog's shared hosting environment. The PHP Fog boss admitted he made it easy when he "unfortunately and stupidly" had an old copy of the company's code on the server that had PHP Fog's system passwords on it, which it had not deleted or changed. Oops. The link for this article located at The Inquirer is no longer available. . Young cybercriminals leveraged a vulnerability to access and disseminate confidential programming from a cloud service provider on social media.. Teenage Hackers, PHP Security Flaw, Cloud Hosting Exploit, Hacker Competition. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
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