Loading
Loading
Loading
Loading
Loading
Loading
Loading
Loading
Loading

Security News This Week: Hackers Claim to Leak Stolen Madison Square Garden Data

Security News This Week: Hackers Claim to Leak Stolen Madison Square Garden Data
Hackers Allegedly Publish Stolen Madison Square Garden Data The hacking and extortion group ShinyHunters has been loudly proclaiming a slew of high-profile victims in recent months: including the education tech firm Instructure, causing disruption in thousands of schools in the process; the photography firm Kodak ; and a key European human rights organization . This week, it also published data allegedly stolen from Madison Square Garden, according to reporting by 404 Media . The published data, allegedly comprising millions of records across 45GB of files, includes potential personal information from customers and references players and coaches from the Knicks. The data was published not long after the Knicks won their first NBA championship since 1973. A sample of the data reviewed by 404 Media included one file purporting to include the names of “talent,” including Knicks members. WIRED has recently reported on Madison Square Garden’s extensive use of surveillance technologies , including face recognition systems. Alleged emails in the stolen data viewed by 404 Media include one man complaining about face recognition technology. MSG did not respond to the publication’s request for comment and after the story broke, a federal class action lawsuit was filed over the alleged data breach. San Francisco Gay Bars Are Scanning People’s Faces on Entry At least three bars in San Francisco's Castro district, the well-known LGBTQ region of the city, have been using face scanners at their entrances to collect detailed information on customers. The bars are using tech from Patronscan, an ID verification company, to collect facial images, names, genders, according to Gazetteer SF , which went to bars using the technology. As well as the data collection, if staff at the bars spot customers fighting, being involved in theft, or other negative behaviors, they can log this in the system. Face recognition can then identify the person the next time they are at the bar. The recorded information can be shared as part of a “ safety network ” between other firms using the tech, creating a widespread surveillance network. France’s Domestic Spy Agency to Drop Palantir Tech For French Alternative For months, governments and companies in Europe have been ditching US technology , citing surveillance and security risks. This week France’s domestic spy agency, the Direction générale de la Sécurité intérieure (DGSI), announced it would stop using Palantir’s data and AI tools in the coming years, replacing them with software from French firm ChapsVision. “We must use our own AI models,” French prime minister Sébastien Lecornu said. “We cannot rely on tools developed by foreign powers. France must have its own tools.” While France has been particularly proactive in trying to remove US technology from its public institutions—going as far as building its own open source equivalents to Zoom and Microsoft Office—it is not the first European intelligence agency to snub Palantir for ChapsVision. Last month, Germany’s intelligence agency BfV said it would use the French technology instead. Apple Plans To Tweak Private Email Tool—Making Its Use More Obvious Apple’s 'Hide My Email' tool allows you to generate a random email address that you can use to privately sign-up to new websites and apps , avoiding you handing over personal info to even more websites. However, the company is set to change the way it creates these email addresses. At present, they all use the @icloud.com domain. Going forward, as TechCrunch reported this week, Apple plans to use the domain: @private.icloud.com. The not-so-subtle change could make it easier for firms to detect people are using the privacy-preserving service and demand sign-ups with an alternative email address.

Source: WIRED

Read Original Source →

Cart (0 items)