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Malicious and criminal attacks were the cause of 59% of data breaches in the last three months, according the latest reported figures.
How could we put the same strategy used by Cambridge Analytica to better use?
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Something good could come from the Cambridge Analytica scandal if we used the same data to fix society, rather than profit from it.
With so many reports of data breaches, it is easy to tune out to what is happening.
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Data breaches are fact of modern life. It’s likely each of us will have our personal information compromised at some point. Here’s how to reduce the risk and limit the damage if and when it occurs.
The transformative nature of our move to a data-driven economy and society means that any data strategy will have long-lasting effects. That’s why the Canadian government needs to ask the right questions to the right people in its ongoing national consultations.
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The Canadian government is right to hold public consultations on digital and data transformation given how profoundly it affects society at large. But the scope is far too narrow.
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Will GDPR usher in a fresh start for the internet? A look at the four main foundation elements and how they affect you.
Hackers exploited a weakness in the web-based booking system of Family Planning NSW to infect the system with ransomware.
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Medical practices have special requirements under the Privacy Act, but the security and privacy systems some providers currently have in place may be inadequate.
A protester wears a mask with the face of Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg, in between men wearing angry face emoji masks, during a protest against Facebook in London in April 2018.
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We’re at a critical moment as users of Facebook. It’s our responsibility to educate ourselves about how our data is bought and sold.
A woman enters Maple High School in Vaughan, Ont., to cast her vote in the Canadian federal election in October 2015. Canada has a lot to learn from Europe in preventing the digital manipulation of voters.
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Several critical Canadian elections are looming. Here’s what Canada can learn from Europe on how to prevent the digital manipulation of voters.
In this November 2017 photo, Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg meets with a group of entrepreneurs and innovators in St. Louis. Zuckerberg is preparing to testify before U.S. Congress over Facebook’s privacy fiasco.
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Why are the masses not disconnecting from Facebook despite the litany of revelations that the company’s brass has long viewed them as dumb sheep?
In this April 2017 photo, Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg speaks at his company’s annual developer conference in San Jose, Calif. Zuckerberg says he will testify to U.S. Congress about the Facebook/Cambridge Analytica data breach.
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Facebook has become a key part of the world’s infrastructure, not just another tech company. It’s time to start treating it that way.
Spectre and Meltdown affected billions of devices.
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Preventing problems like Meltdown and Spectre from reocurring requires software developers to be given sufficient information about hardware to ensure security.
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The risks of big data are not getting enough attention.
The public disclosures Uber has made so far make it very difficult to identify Australians caught up in the data breach.
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Uber has admitted that the 2016 data breach puts at risk the personal information of 57 million users.
There are a lot more holes in cybersecurity fences.
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The modern world depends on critical systems, networks and data repositories that are not as secure as they should be. Breaches will continue until society as a whole makes some big changes.
Online credit card fraud is on the rise in Australia. What can we do?
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The banks are dealing with rising rates of online credit card fraud, but they can’t fix it on their own.
Australians should be able to do more than just access and transfer their own consumer data.
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The Productivity Commission’s report on data availability and use is disappointing for consumers, who won’t be able to stop firms collecting their data or challenge automated decisions made using it.
Data breaches are on the rise and insiders are a big part of it.
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You can never be entirely protected from data breaches, but understanding your data is the first step to minimising the risk.
Changes to the way some organisations must reveal a data breach on personal information.
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New legislation will soon require organisations to disclose any data breaches involving your private details. But the legislation still has some gaps in it.
The campus community can have different cyber priorities.
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Cyber threats are universal. But the appropriate response may be quite different in academia from what works in the corporate world.
Are online black markets this direct?
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What happens after a data breach? What does an attacker do with the information collected? And who wants it, anyway?