Amazon’s Ring has settled with the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) over charges that the company allowed employees and contractors to access customers’ private videos, and failed to implement security protections which enabled hackers to take control of customers’ accounts, cameras, and videos.
The FTC is now sending refunds totaling more than $5.6 million to US consumers as a result of the settlement. Ring LLC, which was purchased by Amazon in February 2018, sells internet-connected, home security cameras and video doorbells.
Read more…
Source: Malwarebytes Labs
Related:
- New Cortana Vulnerability Could Allow Cybercriminals to Bypass Lock Screen On Windows 10 Devices
June 12, 2018
Digital assistants help us look up the weather, play our favorite music, and allow us to quickly access a lot of our personal information. And between Amazon Alexa, Google Home, and Microsoft Cortana – these services have become all the rage these days. However, the latter service, according to the McAfee Labs Advanced Threat Research (ATR) ...
- MyHeritage Says Over 92 Million User Accounts Have Been Compromised
June 5, 2018
MyHeritage, the Israel-based DNA testing service designed to investigate family history, has disclosed that the company website was breached last year by unknown attackers, who stole login credentials of its more than 92 million customers. The company learned about the breach on June 4, 2018, after an unnamed security researcher discovered a database file named “myheritage” ...
- Facebook Accused of Giving Over 60 Device-Makers Deep Access to User Data
June 4, 2018
After being embroiled into controversies over its data sharing practices, it turns out that Facebook had granted inappropriate access to its users’ data to more than 60 device makers, including Amazon, Apple, Microsoft, Blackberry, and Samsung. According to a lengthy report published by The New York Times, the social network giant struck data-sharing partnerships with at least 60 device ...
- GDPR: US news sites blocked to EU users over data protection rules
May 25, 2018
A number of high-profile US news websites are temporarily unavailable in Europe after new European Union rules on data protection came into effect. The Chicago Tribune and LA Times were among those posting messages saying they were currently unavailable in most European countries. The General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) gives EU citizens more rights over how their ...
- Facebook data on 3 million users reportedly exposed through personality quiz
May 15, 2018
Facebook data on more than 3 million people who took a personality quiz was published onto a poorly protected website where it could have been accessed by unauthorized parties, according to New Scientist. In a report exposing the potential leak, New Scientistsays that the data contained Facebook users’ answers to a personality trait test. While it didn’t include users’ ...
- Telco intercepts should be expanded to OTT providers: AGD
May 14, 2018
The Attorney-General’s Department (AGD) has argued in favour of extending Australia’s telecommunications interception laws from telcos to over-the-top providers. Speaking before the Joint Committee on Law Enforcement on Friday, AGD Assistant Secretary Andrew Warnes said this expansion would help combat the “challenge of encryption”. Read more… Source:

