Supermarket giant Morrisons has been told by the Court of Appeal that it is liable for the actions of a malicious insider who breached data on 100,000 employees, setting up a potential hefty class action pay-out.. An original High Court ruling last year said the UK chain was “vicariously liable” for the actions of former employee Andrew Skelton — a disgruntled internal auditor who published the details, which included NI numbers, birth dates and bank account data. The link for this article located at InfoSecurity is no longer available. . Morrisons grapples with accountability following unauthorized access to worker information, igniting fears of a potential collective lawsuit compensation.. Morrisons Liability Case, Insider Threat, Data Breach, Employee Information, Class Action Risks. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
Businesses around the world are sitting on a legal powder keg by failing to adequately protect their servers from hacker intrusion. Nick Lockett, ecommerce lawyer at Sidley & Austin, said that sites which were used by hackers to launch distributed denial . . . . Businesses around the world are sitting on a legal powder keg by failing to adequately protect their servers from hacker intrusion. Nick Lockett, ecommerce lawyer at Sidley & Austin, said that sites which were used by hackers to launch distributed denial of service (DoS) attacks could be liable for large compensation claims. Lockett said: "There is a distinct probability that if your site has been hijacked for a denial of service attack, then you could be liable for damages. I would definitely advise clients they have grounds to sue." The warnings follow an appeal from Michael Vatis, director of the National Infrastructure Protection Centre (NIPC) at the FBI, for dot-coms to increase security levels on the web. The link for this article located at Silicon.com is no longer available. . Businesses around the world are sitting on a legal powder keg by failing to adequately protect their. businesses, around, world, sitting, legal, powder, failing, adequately, protect, their. . Anthony Pell
Businesses are also becoming more conscious of the legal liability they have for inappropriate and illegal content such as abusive email, spam and pornographic material. . . .. Businesses are also becoming more conscious of the legal liability they have for inappropriate and illegal content such as abusive email, spam and pornographic material. "The IDC report defines the full depth and breadth of the content security market for the first time," says David Guyatt, chief executive of market leading company Content Technologies. "For a long time it has been obvious that content security is about much more than just stopping viruses or blocking web sites. This report underpins the need for solutions that help businesses protect themselves against all content security threats to the integrity of their business and IT network." The link for this article located at ZDNet UK is no longer available. . Organizations are becoming more cognizant of the legal risks associated with unsuitable materials and the security of their IT infrastructure.. Content Security, Business Liability, Spam Prevention, IT Network Security. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
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