A teenager in Australia who thought he was doing a good deed by reporting a security vulnerability in a government website was reported to the police.. Joshua Rogers, a 16-year-old in the state of Victoria, found a basic security hole that allowed him to access a database containing sensitive information for about 600,000 public transport users who made purchases through the Metlink web site run by the Transport Department. It was the primary site for information about train, tram and bus timetables. The database contained the full names, addresses, home and mobile phone numbers, email addresses, dates of birth, and a nine-digit extract of credit card numbers used at the site, according to The Age newspaper in Melbourne. The link for this article located at Wired is no longer available. . Emily Carter, a 17-year-old from Queensland, discovered a vulnerability that revealed confidential information on an educational platform.. User Data Exposure, Security Flaw, Data Breach. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
On the 23rd of March 2003 Zone-H reported the possible defacement "What we know is that Zataz has been proved reliable over the time so here we are reporting the news to you. We just hope this won't be another Mc-Williams-Vernon story..." of The White House . . .. On the 23rd of March 2003 Zone-H reported the possible defacement "What we know is that Zataz has been proved reliable over the time so here we are reporting the news to you. We just hope this won't be another Mc-Williams-Vernon story..." of The White House Along with Zone-H, Rootsecure.net share concerns as to its authenticity. The link for this article located at rootsecure.net is no longer available. . On the 23rd of March 2003 Zone-H reported the possible defacement 'What we know is that Zataz has be. march, zone-h, reported, possible, defacement, 'what, zataz. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
One in four Web sites run by the Defense Department have no privacy statement posted, according to an oversight report released Tuesday. An even larger number collect information about the public despite a White House directive barring the practice. The audit . . . . One in four Web sites run by the Defense Department have no privacy statement posted, according to an oversight report released Tuesday. An even larger number collect information about the public despite a White House directive barring the practice. The audit found it possible that commercial companies might secretly have collected and sold personal information about visitors to Defense Web sites. The link for this article located at ComputerUser.com is no longer available. . One in four Web sites run by the Defense Department have no privacy statement posted, according to a. sites, defense, department, privacy, statement, posted, according. . Anthony Pell
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