News

Kelly Benefits has revealed that the cyberattack it experienced last year is even worse than previously thought with more ...
Australian airline Qantas has confirmed a cybersecurity breach that impacts the personal data of six million customers.
A Medicare data breach could put the personal information of more than 100,000 people at risk. Jury in Sean ‘Diddy’ Combs ...
The ransomware attack against grocery giant Ahold Delhaize has resulted in the personal information of millions getting ...
Kelly & Associates Insurance Group (dba Kelly Benefits) is informing more than half a million people of a data breach that compromised their personal information.
Following the FBI warning, Qantas assured customers that the Scattered Spider breach did not leak any passport information.
As Kelly Benefits’s investigation into a recent data breach progressed, the number of impacted individuals continued to grow.
Some say more than 16.5 billion credentials are involved. One thing is for sure: the dark web is swimming in stolen data.
According to the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) Office for Civil Rights, this data breach has impacted around 5.4 million people. Episource submitted the breach to HHS on June 6.
A major hack of AT&T customer records was one of last year's "mega-breaches," according to the Identity Theft Resource Center ...
Okta Global Head of Threat Intelligence Brett Winterford has warned organisations data breaches are “going to continue” after ...