Data breaches are so common now that your eyes may tend to gloss over the news of yet-another public exposure of personally identifiable information (PII) and customer records. . Even in such a world, however, sometimes a case which tops many others still enters the public domain -- such as the discovery of a database which has been described as "perhaps the biggest and most comprehensive email database I have ever reported" by the researcher who uncovered the breach. According to Bob Diachenko, alongside security researcher Vinny Troia, the 150GB MongoDB instance in question contained four separate collections of data. The link for this article located at ZDNet is no longer available. . Even in such a world, however, sometimes a case which tops many others still enters the public domai. breaches, common, gloss, yet-another, public. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
In September 2014, cyber criminals managed to breach the security of the University of California, Berkeley servers. The Real Estate Division of the UC Berkeley was apparently hacked and the personal information of approximately 1600 people including student and faculty may have been compromised.. UC Berkeley notice the breach in September 2014, after which it removed the affected servers from the network. Thereafter UC Berkeley began reviewing the data stored on the servers to look for personal information. The search for personally identifiable information concluded the week of November 17, 2014, and notification letters were mailed starting December 12, 2014. After identifying the people whose personal information may have been compromised, UC Berkeley sent out emails to the affected people. The link for this article located at TechWorm is no longer available. . UC Berkeley notice the breach in September 2014, after which it removed the affected servers from th. september, cyber, criminals, managed, breach, security, university, california. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
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