How hackers ruined a Disney employee’s life after he downloaded AI photo tool


A former Disney employee’s world was turned upside down when he downloaded an artificial intelligence-powered photo program, unaware that it was laced with hacking software, during a massive data breach at the entertainment giant.

In July, Matthew Van Andel, an engineer at Disney at the time, got a message on the chat forum Discord from an unknown account, which seemed to know personal, granular details that would only be possible if the individual had access to his workplace Slack chat program.

Read more…
Source: MSN News


Sign up for our Newsletter


Related:

  • Incident Response Plans: A Comparison of US Law, EU Law and Soon-To-Be EU Law

    February 3, 2017

    The best way to handle any emergency is to be prepared. When it comes to data breaches, incident response plans are the first step organizations take to prepare. In the United States, incident response plans are commonplace. Since 2005, the federal banking agencies have interpreted the Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act as requiring financial institutions to create procedures for ...

  • Pentagon Servers Flawed, Easy to Hack

    February 1, 2017

    The U.S. Department of Defense could be at risk of being attacked by hackers quite easily, one security researcher warns. According to ZDNet, who cites Dan Tentler, founder of cybersecurity firm Phobos Group, several misconfigured servers run by the DoD could allow hackers easy access to internal government systems. That includes foreign actors eager to find ...

  • Hacker claims to have hacked the FBI, but it wasn’t

    January 5, 2017

    A hacker yesterday claimed to have hacked the FBI’s website running on Plone CMS, but it seems it wasn’t hacked using any zero-day vulnerability in Plone. We contacted Plone security team and updated this story (see below) with official statements.A hacker, using Twitter handle CyberZeist, has claimed to have hacked the FBI’s website (fbi.gov) and ...

  • 11 Gigabytes of Sensitive Data Belonging to US DoD Staff Exposed

    January 5, 2017

    Personal details of doctors who are deployed in the United States Special Operations Command (USSOCOM or SOCOM) have been exposed due to a security vulnerability discovered in a server operated by health services contractor Potomac Healthcare Solutions. MacKeeper Security Researcher Chris Vickery discovered in late December that Potomac, which provides healthcare workers to the government through ...