Highly sensitive data on over 2.3 million Mexican patients has been exposed via a misconfigured MongoDB installation. . Bob Diachenko, formerly of the Kromtech Security Center, made the discovery via a simple Shodan search last week and claimed in a post that the data was viewable and editable for anyone without a password. The link for this article located at InfoSecurity is no longer available. . Bob Diachenko, formerly of the Kromtech Security Center, made the discovery via a simple Shodan sear. highly, sensitive, million, mexican, patients, exposed, misconfigured. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
The ongoing furor over fake SSL certificates continued to dominate security headlines, while increasing SpyEye botnet activity and leaked patient health information also drew attention the week of Sept. 5.. The week's biggest data breach news had nothing to do with Anonymous or any other online group. Instead, Stanford University's hospital confirmed that a spreadsheet containing 20,000 patient records had been posted onto a commercial Website. In this incident, an employee of a third-party service provider to the hospital posted the entire patient information spreadsheet to a Website in search of help on creating bar graphs. This is a remarkable, yet telling example of what can go wrong if employees are not trained to be privacy conscious. The link for this article located at eWeek is no longer available. . The latest data security headlines shifted focus from the usual suspects, revealing significant vulnerabilities that have led to alarming breaches in sensitive information.. Data Breach, Healthcare Security, Patient Records, Privacy Training, SSL Security. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
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