Two flaws are being actively used to target multiple organizations.
Someone targeted a company operating multiple stalkerware apps and leaked names, email addresses, and partial payment card data.
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India’s Aadhaar is moving into wallets, hotels and policing through a new app. Critics say that amid the broader Aadhaar rollout, it’s unclear how data shared through the new app would prevent breaches or leaks.
According to TechCrunch’s ongoing tally, including the most recent data spill involving uMobix, there have been at least 27 stalkerware companies since 2017 that are known to have been hacked, or leaked customer and victims’ data online.
US Secret Service gets involved, as merchants report cash payments only.
More than half-a-million people who bought access to phone surveillance and social media snooping apps had their email address and partial payment card numbers published online.
Popular image sharing site had its data compromised in a third-party breach.
Impersonation comes in many shapes and forms, and stealing domains seems to be one of them.
Database misconfigurations resulted in a huge data leak which hackers already picked up on.
The last major nuclear arms treaty between the US and Russia just expired. Some experts believe a combination of satellite surveillance, AI, and human reviewers can take its place. Others, not so much.