Sentences with phrase «massive breaches in security»

Not exact matches

A month prior, Target had disclosed a massive security breach in which hackers stole the personal information of 70 million customers in the U.S. Combined with the bleeding operations in Target Canada, Steinhafel's position was untenable, and he stepped down in May.
A senior Yahoo executive addressed a massive security incident on Wednesday, offering additional details about a breach that saw hackers steal personal data from more than 500 million customer accounts in late 2014.
In September, Equifax reported a massive data breach, saying hackers may have accessed the personal details, including names and Social Security numbers, of more than 143 million consumers from mid-May to July.
Consumers have been bombarded by bad news about digital security this year, most recently the massive Equifax data breach revealed in September.
Gov. Andrew Cuomo, responding to the massive security breach at Equifax, will propose regulations today that subject credit reporting agencies to the same rules as banks and insurances companies in order to protect consumers.
In it, Melissa McCarthy portrays a smart but under - appreciated CIA analyst who, following a massive security breach that leaves the regular agents (such as those played by Jason Statham and Jude Law) out of commission, winds up going out into the field herself to follow a bizarrely bewigged Bulgarian baddie (Rose Byrne) who is involved with a particularly nefarious plot with worldwide implications.
Luckily, IT departments are seeing greater willingness from firms to invest in security due in part to massive data breaches (notable the one involving Target) last year that has put cybersecurity in the spotlight.
And there are exceedingly few reported cases of privacy or security issues because of the cloud — in contrast to the nearly daily announcement of a massive and far - reaching security breach by a major corporation from presumably secure, in - house data stores.
The Securities and Exchange Commission and the Department of Justice have both charged Jun Ying, a former CIO at data broker Equifax, with engaging in illegal insider trading after he determined that his employer had suffered a massive breach.
If «just a few people don't click the link, it may save a massive breach in the future,» NCSC Director Bill Evanina said Sept. 9 at a conference hosted by the Intelligence and National Security Alliance and AFCEA.
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