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Hacker Steals Ten Years Worth of Data From San Diego School District (zdnet.com)

A hacker has stolen the personal details of over 500,000 San Diego Unified School District staff and students, the district revealed in a breach notice posted on its website Friday. From a report: The breach occurred because the attacker gained access to staff credentials via a tactic known as phishing -- sending authentic-looking emails that redirect users to fake login pages were attackers collect login credentials. The attack didn't go unnoticed. Some staff reported the funny-looking emails to IT staff, who investigated and eventually discovered the breach in October this year. District officials said the hacker had access to its network between January 2018 and November 1, 2018, but that he stole student and staff data going back to the 2008-2009 school year.

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  1. Re:What is of real value? by Jason+Levine · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Don't underestimate how little companies might check information before opening a line of credit. When my identity was stolen, the thieves opened a credit card in my name. They had the name, address, SSN, and date of birth right, but the mother's maiden name wasn't even close. This is billed as a "security question," but failing this didn't stop Capital One from opening a card in my name for the identity thieves.

    In my case, I found out about it due to a fluke. The thieves paid for rush delivery of the card and THEN changed the address to their own. The rush delivery processed first and the card came to me. Had that processing switched, they would have gotten the card, racked up a ton of debt in my name, and I would have only found out about it when the collections agencies banged down my door telling me to repay what "I" charged.

    For the credit card company, dealing with this was as simple as writing it off as fraud and closing the account. For me, it meant dealing with the fallout and freezing my credit permanently (only thawing it when I want to open a new account). Credit Card companies have almost zero incentive to prevent identity theft.

    --
    My sci-fi novel, Ghost Thief, is now available from Amazon.com.