Not exact matches
It seems
like just
about every week we hear of a new
data breach affecting millions of people.
It seems
like every quarter there's a new story
about how hackers
breached a major company's cyber-defenses and stole millions of pieces of highly sensitive
data.
News headlines
about data breaches at companies
like Equifax and related, looming threats from Intel chips have put many of us are on high alert.
Like most of its peers, Yandex provided no information
about how it responds to
data breaches (P15).
Interestingly, student debtors were more concerned
about their personal
data getting
breached through a site
like Facebook when compared to their financial information getting stolen in an instance
like the Orbitz credit card hack.
It seems
like every month we hear
about a new
data breach with more personal information stolen, so this reason seems to be increasingly more likely all the time.
It seems
like every day, we're hearing
about a company suffering from a major
data breach, potentially placing customers» personal and financial information at risk.
It seems
like every few months we're hearing
about a new
data breach that has compromised our personal information.
«To then have that
data shared with third parties that you weren't explicitly notified
about, and having that possibly threaten your health or safety — that is an extremely, extremely egregious
breach of basic standards that we wouldn't expect from a company that
likes to brand itself as a supporter of the queer community.»
Between your friends tagging you on Facebook, and the very many
data breaches experienced by sites
like Yahoo and Orbitz, there is more information
about you floating around online than you may realize.
In 2017 alone, we learned
about massive
data breaches from major organizations
like Equifax, Uber, and Verizon.