No doubt I’ll have more recruiters interrupting
my Computer Security class. Backups people, backups!
Atlanta
officials reveal worsening effects of cyber attack
… Atlanta’s administration has disclosed
little about the financial impact or scope of the March 22 ransomware
hack, but information released at the budget briefings confirms
concerns that it may be the worst cyber assault on any U.S. city.
More than a third of the 424 software programs
used by the city have been thrown offline or partially disabled in
the incident, Atlanta Information Management head Daphne Rackley
said. Nearly 30 percent of the affected applications are considered
“mission critical,” affecting core city services, including
police and courts.
Initially, officials believed the reaches of the
cyber assault on city software was close to 20 percent and that no
critical applications were compromised, Rackley said.
… Rackley anticipated an additional $9.5
million would be needed by her department in the coming year due to
the hacking. That would be a sharp increase from the $35 million
Mayor Keisha Lance Bottoms suggested for the technology department in
her budget pitch, which was delayed in the cyber incident.
… Departments citywide, including municipal
courts, told the council on Wednesday about their struggles to regain
workplace normalcy since the attack. Interim City Attorney Nina
Hickson said her office lost 71 of 77 computers as well as a
decade of legal documents.
The discussions came two days after Atlanta Police
Chief Erika Shields told local television news station WSB-TV 2 that
the hack wiped out police
dash-cam recordings. “That is lost and will not be
recovered,” she said in a brief televised interview.
Something my Computer Security students should be
asking their organization’s lawyers. WWTJS: What Would Thomas
Jefferson Say (T-shirts sold separately.)
Alison Frankel writes about what she calls the
less obvious takeaway from the 11th Circuit’s LabMD opinion:
FTC enforcement actions for unfair practices cannot be based just on consumer injury, even “substantial” injury.
This is going to get wonky, but, trust me, it’s what cybersecurity defense lawyers are already buzzing about.
Read more on Reuters.
And yes, that aspect of the ruling did not go unnoticed or
uncommented upon on Twitter when the opinion was released. Consider,
for example, this footnote from the opinion:
24 Section 5(n) now states, with regard to public policy, “In determining whether an act or practice is unfair, the Commission may consider established public policies as evidence to be considered with all other evidence. Such public policy considerations may not serve as a primary basis for such determination.” We do not take this ambiguous statement to mean that the Commission may bring suit purely on the basis of substantial consumer injury. The act or practice alleged to have caused the injury must still be unfair under a well-established legal standard, whether grounded in statute, the common law, or the Constitution.
So there’s a lot to discuss about this opinion,
and I think this point is going to pose a major hurdle for the FTC
going forward in data security cases. Where are they going to find
statutory, common law, or constitutional bases for declaring specific
acts or practices “unfair?” Will they start engaging in rule-
or regulation-writing? I am guessing, based on their history of
enforcement, that they will turn to common law, but I look forward to
reading what scholars and litigators think.
New laws to consider. Will anyone summarize what
we learn?
… If consumers don't even know where these
data brokers are getting their data from and what they're doing with
it, they can't make intelligent buying choices.
This is starting to change, thanks to a new law in
Vermont and another in Europe. And more legislation is coming.
Vermont first . At the moment, we don't know how
many data brokers collect data on Americans. Credible estimates
range from 2,500
to 4,000 different companies. Last week, Vermont passed
a
law that will change that.
The law does several things to improve the
security of Vermonters' data, but several provisions matter to all of
us. First, the law
requires data brokers that trade in Vermonters' data to register
annually.
… A 2018 California ballot
initiative
could help. Among its provisions, it gives consumers the right to
demand exactly what information a data broker has about them. If it
passes in November, once it takes effect, lots of Californians will
take the list of data brokers from Vermont's registration law and
demand this information based on their own law.
… We will also benefit from another, much more
comprehensive, data privacy and security law from the European Union.
The General Data Protection
Regulation (GDPR) was passed in 2016 and took effect on 25 May.
The details of the law are far too complex to explain here, but among
other things, it mandates
that personal data can only be collected and saved for specific
purposes and only with the explicit consent of the user. We'll learn
who is collecting what and why, because companies that collect data
are going to have to ask European users and customers for permission.
… In the coming weeks and months, you're going
to see other companies disclose what they're doing with your data.
One early example is PayPal: in preparation for GDPR, it published
a list of the
over 600 companies it shares your personal data with. Expect a lot
more like this.
"Amateurs talk strategy. Professionals talk
logistics." Gen. Omar Bradley (probably)
Google
Renounces AI Weapons; Will Still Work With Military
Google pledged not to use its powerful artificial
intelligence for weapons, illegal surveillance and technologies that
cause "overall harm." But the company said it will keep
working with the military in other areas, giving its cloud business
the chance to pursue future lucrative government deals.
All of this had to be shipped to a rather small
geographic area, right? Amazon didn’t notice that?
How this
young Indiana couple stole $1.2 million from Amazon
On Monday, a U.S. District Court judge sentenced
a Muncie, Indiana married couple to nearly six years in prison apiece
for stealing more than $1.2 million in consumer electronics from
e-commerce giant Amazon.
… Between 2014 and 2016, the Finans created
hundreds of fake online identities and Amazon accounts. They then
used them to order more than 2,700 electronics products — GoPro
digital cameras, Microsoft Xboxes, Apple Macbooks, Microsoft Surface
tablets and more, federal authorities said in a press release
announcing their sentencing.
After ordering the products, the Finans would tell
the company that the products had arrived damaged or that they did
not work.
Amazon's famously friendly customer service policy
allows customers to "receive a replacement before they return a
broken item," in some cases, according to a release
from the U.S. Attorney's Office, Southern District of Indiana.
Amazon keeps a close eye on customers' accounts to
track any potential fraud. But the government said the Finans were
able to get away with receiving the replacement products before
returning the supposedly damaged goods by using their long list of
false identities to simply abandon each fake account before their
fraud was discovered.
So the Finans would ask Amazon to send replacement
products at no charge. Once Amazon would comply, the Finans then
sold the stolen merchandise to an accomplice, Danijel Glumac, 29, who
sold the items to an entity in New York that would sell the products
to the public.
Who’d a thunk it?
Paper –
Scholarly Twitter metrics
Scholarly
Twitter metrics, Stefanie Haustein (Submitted on 6 Jun 2018) –
to be published in W. Gl\”anzel, H.F. Moed, U. Schmoch, & M.
Thelwall (Eds.), Handbook of Quantitative Science and Technology
Research, Springer. 40 pages, 5 figures, 7 tables. Cite as:
arXiv:1806.02201 [cs.SI] (or arXiv:1806.02201v1 [cs.SI] for this
version)
“Twitter has arguably been the most popular
among the data sources that form the basis of so-called altmetrics.
Tweets to scholarly documents have been heralded as both early
indicators of citations as well as measures of societal impact. This
chapter provides an overview of Twitter activity as the basis for
scholarly metrics from a critical point of view and equally describes
the potential and limitations of scholarly Twitter metrics. By
reviewing the literature on Twitter in scholarly communication and
analyzing 24 million tweets linking to scholarly documents, it aims
to provide a basic understanding of what tweets can and cannot
measure in the context of research evaluation. Going beyond the
limited explanatory power of low correlations between tweets and
citations, this chapter considers what types of scholarly documents
are popular on Twitter, and how, when and by whom they are diffused
in order to understand what tweets to scholarly documents measure.
Although this chapter is not able to solve the problems associated
with the creation of meaningful metrics from social media, it
highlights particular issues and aims to provide the basis for
advanced scholarly Twitter metrics.”
(Related) Scholarly Facebook data.
From Bach
to Rock: How Music Preferences Predict Behavior
If the aggressive
rap of Eminem is an auditory assault that sends you searching for
smooth jazz, you’re probably a person with a high level of
openness. That’s one interpretation from a study that looks at the
link between music and personality. The study, by Wharton marketing
professor Gideon
Nave, has wide-ranging implications in our data-driven world.
Companies that
collect data to tailor product offerings, for example, can gain more
insight by looking at their customers’ online playlists.
Nave joined Knowledge@Wharton to discuss the paper, “Musical
Preferences Predict Personality: Evidence from Active Listening and
Facebook Likes.”
1 comment:
QuickBooks Support Phone Number 1800-243-1465. QuickBooks is an accounting program group released by Intuit supports in compliment and sensible controlling of cash related data. It makes things less requesting paying little information to the likelihood that it is the compound data to that level where it can be effortlessly joined.
QuickBooks Support Phone Number
QB 24x7 Support Number
QuickBooks Support Number
QuickBooks Tech Support Number
QuickBooks Tech Support Phone Number
Intuit QuickBooks Support
Intuit QuickBooks Support Number
QuickBooks Customer Service Number
QuickBooks Customer Service
QuickBooks Customer Service Phone Number
QuickBooks Support
QuickBooks Help Number
Intuit QuickBooks Phone Number
QuickBooks Technical Support Number
QuickBooks Technical Support Phone Number
QuickBooks Toll-free Support Number
QuickBooks Toll-free Number
QuickBooks Desktop Support Number
QuickBooks Support USA
QuickBooks USA Support Phone Number
QuickBooks USA Support Number
QuickBooks Support Phone Number USA
QuickBooks Support Number USA
QuickBooks Support Number 2019
QuickBooks Support Phone Number 2019
QB 24/7 Support Phone Number
Post a Comment