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T-Mobile data leak revealed call logs and phone numbers

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T-Mobile data leak revealed call logs and phone numbers

T-Mobile has disclosed a data breach that exposed customer proprietary network information (CPNI), which includes phone numbers and call history.

T-Mobile started texting consumers about a “security incident” that revealed the details of their accounts yesterday.

T-Mobile claims that recently, their systems had “malicious, unauthorised access” uncovered by their security staff. T-Mobile hired a cybersecurity company to conduct an investigation, and the results showed that threat actors had gotten access to CPNI, or customer-generated network information, used for telecommunications.

Phone numbers, call history, and the number of lines on an account are among the data compromised in this attack.

“The Federal Communications Commission (FCC) regulations’ definition of customer proprietary network information (CPNI) was accessed. The CPNI that was accessed might have included your phone number, the number of lines you have subscribed to, and, in some cases, call-related data gathered as part of your wireless service’s routine operation “T-Mobile claimed in a notification of a data breach.

According to T-Mobile, the compromised data did not include the names, addresses, email addresses, financial information, credit card information, social security numbers, tax IDs, passwords, or PINs of account holders.

T-Mobile claimed that this hack only affected a “small number of consumers (less than 0.2%)” in a statement to BleepingComputer. There are roughly 200,000 persons who have been impacted by this breach out of T-estimated Mobile’s 100 million customers.

“Less than 0.2% of our clients are now receiving notifications that some account information may have been improperly accessed. Names connected to the account, financial information, credit card details, social security numbers, passwords, PINs, and physical or email addresses were NOT among the data obtained. Phone numbers, the number of lines a user subscribes to, and, in a few rare situations, call-related data gathered as part of routine operation and service, were among the data that may have been accessed “Tells BleepingComputer, T-Mobile.

Anyone who has received a text alert about this incident should be on the watch for any suspicious texts that seem to be from T-Mobile and ask for information or contain links to websites that are not owned by T-Mobile.

Threat actors frequently employ information they have obtained from other targeted phishing and smishing efforts in an effort to obtain sensitive data such login names and passwords.

Prior data breaches at T-Mobile occurred in 2018, 2019 for prepaid customers, and in March 2020, which exposed personal and financial information.

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Angry IT administrator destroys employer’s databases; sentenced to 7 years in prison

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Angry IT administrator destroys employer's databases; sentenced to 7 years in prison

Han Bing, a former database manager for Lianjia, a major Chinese real estate agency, was given a 7-year prison term for breaking into company computers and erasing data.

Bing is accused of carrying out the conduct in June 2018, when he reportedly accessed the company’s finance system using his administrator rights and “root” account and deleted all previously saved data from two database servers and two application servers.

Large elements of Lianjia’s operations were immediately crippled as a result, leaving tens of thousands of workers without pay for an extended length of time and necessitating a data restoration effort that cost about $30,000.

However, because Lianjia has thousands of offices, employs over 120,000 brokers, owns 51 companies, and has an estimated $6 billion market value, the indirect costs from the firm’s economic disruption were significantly more detrimental.

examination of the staff
H. Bing was one of the five primary suspects in the event involving the data deletion, according to records made public by the court of the People’s Procuratorate of Haidian District, Beijing.

When the administrator refused to reveal his laptop password to the company’s inspectors, suspicions were quickly aroused.

Chinese media outlets who reprinted portions of the disclosed documents explain that “Han Bing stated that his computer had confidential data and the password could only be handed to official authorities, or would only accept entering it personally and being present during the checks.”

The checks were solely carried out to evaluate the response of the five employees who had access to the system because, as the investigators testified in court, they knew that such an operation wouldn’t leave any records on the laptops.

Finally, the experts were able to pinpoint the activity to particular internal IPs and MAC addresses after retrieving access records from the servers. The inspectors even collected WiFi network logs and timestamps, which they afterwards compared against CCTV footage to validate their suspicions.

The forensic expert hired by the company concluded that Bing had wiped the databases using the “shred” and “rm” commands. Rm deletes the files’ symbolic links, whereas shred overwrites the data three times with different patterns to make it unrecoverable.

Unhappy employee?
Unexpectedly, Bing had regularly warned his employer and superiors about security flaws in the finance system, even emailing other administrators to express his concerns.

He was mostly disregarded, nevertheless, as the departmental administrators never gave their approval for the security project he wanted to oversee.

This was supported by the testimony of the director of ethics at Lianjia, who told the court that Han Bing frequently argued with his superiors because he believed his organisational suggestions weren’t valued.

A similar incident occurred in September 2021 when a former employee of a credit union in New York deleted approximately 21.3GB of records in a 40-minute rampage as retaliation for her managers terminating her.

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Zuckerberg says Facebook is dealing with Spotify on a songs assimilation job codenamed Task Boombox (Salvador Rodriguez/CNBC).

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Facebook is dealing with Spotify on a songs

Zuckerberg says Facebook is working with Spotify on a music integration project codenamed Project Boombox (Salvador Rodriguez/CNBC)

Salvador Rodriguez / CNBC:
Zuckerberg says Facebook is working with Spotify on a music integration project codenamed Project Boombox  —  – Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg on Monday announced that the company is building audio features where users can engage in real-time conversations with others.

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THE UNITIONS OF WEARABLE DEVICE SHIPMENTS FOR 2020 GREW 28.4% TO 444.7M UNITS, TEAHING FROM APPLE, WHICH GREW 27.2% IN Q4 AND HAS 36.2% MARKETSHARE, FOLLOWED BY XIAOMI AT *9% (IDC).

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WEARABLE DEVICE SHIPMENTS FOR 2020

Wearable device shipments for 2020 grew 28.4% to 444.7M units globally, led by Apple which grew 27.2% in Q4 and has 36.2% marketshare, followed by Xiaomi at ~9%  —  Worldwide shipments of wearable devices reached 153.5 million in the fourth quarter of 2020 (4Q20), a year-over-year increase …

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