He added later: “Paying ransom never guarantees the full recovery of data, and Los Angeles Unified believes public dollars are better spent on our students rather than capitulating to a nefarious and ...
Hackers released data from Los Angeles Unified School District on Saturday ... But the full extent of the release remains unclear. The release of data came two days earlier than the deadline ...
A criminal syndicate largely failed to steal valuable data ... in LAUSD schools, would have preferred that the district pay it. She too is worried about what repercussions the hack will have ...
Hackers have given Los Angeles Unified School District until Monday ... students and education,” the district wrote in a news release. “Paying ransom never guarantees the full recovery of data, and ...
Hackers have reportedly begun to sell patient data and business agreements they claim were stolen in the Change Healthcare cyberattack. The RansomHub cybercriminal gang wrote on the dark web April ...
The group behind the breach says more data will continue to be released Hackers who stole customer ... CEO David Koczkaro warned that the data release could stop people from seeking medical ...
Cybercriminals are claiming to have accessed three terabytes of NHS patient and staff data and are threatening to release it unless their demands are met. The hackers posted “a smaller number ...
Roku said hackers gained unauthorized access to 576,000 accounts, the company’s second data-breach incident this year, prompting the streaming-hardware maker to institute additional security ...
Hackers broke into the Israeli Ministry of Security, National Insurance Institute, and, more recently, Ministry of Justice and Dimona Nuclear Research Facility systems to release thousands of ...
Health bosses said on March 19 that IT systems had been restored to normal - but warned that hackers could have stolen a “significant amount of data” NHS Dumfries and Galloway chief executive Jeff Ace ...
SYDNEY: Hackers have threatened to leak the stolen health data of 1,000 famous Australians in a cybersecurity incident described by the government on Oct 20 as a “huge wake-up call”.