Data I/O Becomes Latest Ransomware Attack Victim
The “incident” led to outages affecting a variety of the tech company’s operations, though the full scope of the breach is unknown.
darkreading – Read More
The “incident” led to outages affecting a variety of the tech company’s operations, though the full scope of the breach is unknown.
darkreading – Read More
The flaw is one of three that the company disclosed affecting its NetScaler ADC and NetScaler Gateway technologies.
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Battery Health Assistance is designed to prolong your phone’s battery, but it comes at a cost.
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The Samsung QN80F is a premium big-screen TV with object-tracking sound and a 120Hz refresh rate. Get one for nearly 50% off ahead of Labor Day.
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The Social Security Administration’s chief data officer has publicly blown the whistle, alleging DOGE put hundreds of millions of Social Security records at risk of compromise.
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Gartner contradicts its own messaging on AI agents, so what’s a company to do? For one thing, don’t be pressured into risky, rash decisions by crazy talk.
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New features to take over smartphones and monitor user activity demonstrate the continued evolution of the malware, which is now being spread on GitHub.
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Data brokers compile extensive dossiers on you to resell later. They’re interested in all of us — hundreds of millions of folks worldwide — and they don’t ask for our permission or pay us any compensation. Most of these companies aren’t well known, and you’ve likely never had any direct contact with them. But there are around a thousand of them in the U.S. alone, and five times as many worldwide. This market was estimated at nearly $300 billion last year. Data brokers’ clients include banks checking credit history, retailers looking for new customers, intelligence agencies, and many other organizations that need detailed data on individuals.
Data brokers collect anything and everything they can get their hands on. Most often:
To compile such an intimidatingly detailed file, brokers download any publicly available data (social media profiles, business registries, real estate registries, online classified ads), request information from credit bureaus, and buy data from each other. They also purchase data from loyalty programs, and analytics from gadget vendors. And they collaborate with online advertising and tracking firms — especially those that place ads in mobile apps.
All this information is cross-referenced using recurring identifiers (email addresses, phone numbers, names and addresses, ID numbers) to enrich each profile.
Collected and resold data has an invisible yet significant impact on your life. Why were you denied a loan, or why did your insurance premium go up? How come real estate agents have your phone number when you only decided to buy a house yesterday? According to a U.S. Senate committee investigation, some data brokers’ collections are clearly designed to exploit people’s difficult circumstances. The names of these datasets speak for themselves: “Rural and Barely Making It”, “Retiring on Empty: Singles”, and “Tough Start: Young Single Parents”. Information like this is often purchased by payday loan providers. Other collections are ominously named too, such as “Individuals who recently visited abortion clinics”.
In an extreme example from 2025, a killer bought data on victims’ residential addresses from publicly available data broker websites to track and assassinate political targets in the U.S.
The same Senate investigation highlights that brokers usually operate in secrecy. They collect data without directly interacting with consumers, often hide their data sources, and prohibit their buyers from revealing where contact lists were obtained.
Note that data brokers, like any other companies, are vulnerable to cyberattacks. When they’re breached, the data they’ve collected falls into the hands of true cybercriminals. The scale of the consequences for victims of a data breach can be illustrated with just one case: last year, hackers stole a database containing 2.7 billion records from a company named National Public Data. The records included full names, addresses, dates of birth, phone numbers, and social security numbers (SSNs). It’s believed that the breach affected every US citizen or resident with an SSN!
While the world is gradually introducing legislation to force data brokers to comply with user requests to find and remove personal information, the process can be quite challenging in practice.
If you’re up for a challenge, arm yourself with both patience and a spreadsheet (in Excel or similar), and follow our instructions:
It’s near impossible to avoid getting noticed by data brokers altogether, but you can minimize the amount of data they collect.
Other posts about how your personal data is collected and how to fight back:
Kaspersky official blog – Read More
The base model Kindle is the most effective and value-packed out of the lineup for a few reasons. Ahead of Labor Day Weekend, the e-reader is on sale for under $100.
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New research shows the AI revolution is impacting younger workers more than older ones – but all hope is not lost.
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