UK officials have slapped Equifax with a £500,000 (US$660,000) fine for failing to protect up to 15 million citizens' personal data. The Information Commissioner's Office (ICO) has announced its verdict after almost a year-long investigation with the Financial Conduct Authority. . Together, they looked into the massive Equifax breach that affected 146 million people around the world. Cybercriminals infiltrated the consumer credit reporting agency's systems by using an exploit on its website to gain access to people's names, addresses, birthdates, SSNs, as well as tax and driver's license information. The link for this article located at Engadget is no longer available. . UK regulators fined Equifax 00,000 for neglecting to protect personal data of 15 million citizens during a massive breach.. Equifax Data Breach, Financial Penalty, Cyber Security, Regulatory Action. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
Google was the main target of a group of privacy commissioners from 10 nations who held a press event in Washington, D.C., on Tuesday to air their grievances. They castigated the company over its botched Buzz rollout and criticized its Street View operations. However, other online companies -- such as Facebook and other social networks -- should also take notice, the commissioners warned.. Saying they've grown increasingly impatient with online companies that pay too little heed to national privacy laws and expectations, data protection commissioners from 10 countries on Tuesday launched what they promised would be an ongoing effort to match worldwide enforcement with the growing global market in social network Manage and monitor your systems with Landscape for Ubuntu. Free 60 day Trial. information. "We've seen this happening a couple of times now and we want to say, 'No, this can't go on the way it has," said Jennifer Stoddart, Canada's privacy commissioner. The group fired its first shot at Google (Nasdaq: GOOG), asking the company to explain what is widely considered to be its flawed launch of the social networking tool, Buzz, and answer how it intends to more closely hew to privacy expectations in the future. The link for this article located at LinuxInsider is no longer available. . Regulatory authorities from various countries voice frustration towards firms that overlook local data protection regulations, emphasizing challenges in the digital landscape.. Privacy Compliance, Data Protection, Online Enforcement, Social Networks, Regulatory Action. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
Federal Privacy Commissioner Malcolm Crompton believes spammers may breach Australia's National Privacy Principles and hopes to join the fight against spam by launching a test case. "More active pursuit of spammers by authorities is one of the recommendations of the . . . . Federal Privacy Commissioner Malcolm Crompton believes spammers may breach Australia's National Privacy Principles and hopes to join the fight against spam by launching a test case. "More active pursuit of spammers by authorities is one of the recommendations of the NOIE interim report on SPAM," Crompton said. "While we have not actively pursued spam beyond specific complaints received, this is clearly an initiative that the Office could consider if it had additional resources." The Office of the Federal Privacy Commissioner cannot currently run such a case, he said, because its current case load of responses to actual complaints exceeds the number budgeted for by a factor of five. This leaves insufficient resources to run test cases. The link for this article located at ZDNetAU is no longer available. . Federal Privacy Commissioner Malcolm Crompton believes spammers may breach Australia's National Priv. federal, privacy, commissioner, malcolm, crompton, believes, spammers, breach, australia's, national. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
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