This Week in Data Breaches | UpGuard Newsletter
Here's your weekly digest of global data breaches.?This week's newsletter covers breaches impacting?Ivanti,?Michigan State University, and?Sun Life.
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Data Breaches
?????Norway | Bleeping Computer?|?Government
The Norwegian National Security Authority (NSM) has confirmed that attackers used a zero-day vulnerability in Ivanti's Endpoint Manager Mobile (EPMM) solution to breach a software platform used by 12 ministries in the country. Continue Reading
?????United States?|?WLNS?|?Education
Michigan State University students and employees could be affected by an international data breach, the university said Monday. The university was alerted to the hack by third-party service providers National Student Clearinghouse, or NSC, and TIAA, a financial planning company. Continue Reading
?????Canada?|?JD Supra?|?Financial Services
Sun Life Assurance Company of Canada posted a notice on its website describing a third-party data breach resulting from a third-party vendor’s use of the MOVEit file transfer software. The incident resulted in an unauthorized party being able to access consumers’ sensitive information, which includes their names, Social Security Numbers, policy numbers, account numbers and dates of birth. Continue Reading
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Other Cybersecurity News
?????United Kingdom?|?Computer Weekly?|?Healthcare
Staff at two UK ambulance services have been forced to fall back on traditional analogue systems to carry on working after access to patient record systems hosted by a third-party supplier was disrupted in a cyber attack of an undisclosed nature.
?? Global |?Infosecurity Magazine?|?Education
The education sector recorded a higher share of ransomware victims than any other in 2022, according to a new report from Sophos. The security vendor’s report, The State of Ransomware in Education 2023, was compiled from interviews with 400 IT and cybersecurity leaders globally.
?????United States?|?SC Magazine?|?Government
The White House and the Federal Communications Commission introduced a "U.S. Cyber Trust Mark" labeling program on Tuesday that aims to push IoT device makers to better secure their gadgets and give consumers reassurance that a product is secure before buying it.
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