Wireless company T-Mobile US has agreed to pay about $60 million to settle allegations it failed to promptly report incidents of unauthorized data access in violation of a national security agreement that allowed its merger with rival Sprint, according to senior U.S. government officials.
The civil penalty, announced Wednesday by the Committee on Foreign Investment in the U.S., is the largest fine to date imposed by the U.S. regulatory panel that reviews deals for U.S. national security risks. It is also the first enforcement action taken by Cfius that publicly named the targeted company, the officials said.
Read more…
Source: MSN News
Related:
- How to Bury a Major Breach Notification
February 21, 2017
Amid the hustle and bustle of the RSA Security Conference in San Francisco last week, researchers at RSA released a startling report that received very little press coverage relative to its overall importance. The report detailed a malware campaign that piggybacked on a popular piece of software used by system administrators at some of the ...
- Why Cybersecurity Should Be The CFO’s Job
January 31, 2017
Cyber risk is a 21st century business reality and something that can’t be ignored. The sheer pervasiveness of these risks, matched with the evolution into far more complex attacks, means the C-Suite has to get serious about managing cybersecurity. I sat down with Steffan Tomlinson this month, CFO of Palo Alto Networks, who explains why ...
- Last Year’s Data Breaches Exposed 4.2 Billion Records, Most from America
January 26, 2017
The United States was the main target of hacker attacks last year, resulting in a record number of data breaches. According to a report from Risk Based Security, during 2016 there were 4,149 data breaches which resulted in the exposure of 4.2 billion records. Nearly half, or more specifically 47.5%, of the breaches that exposed user ...
- Yahoo Under SEC Investigation for Taking too Long to Reveal Data Breaches
January 23, 2017
Yahoo is in big trouble with US authorities due to how it handled the massive data breaches it disclosed last year, more specifically its failure to inform investors of the issues at an earlier time. The United States Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) has launched an investigation, the Wall Street Journal reports, which is yet in ...
- Smaller firms set to ‘face £52bn in fines’ for security breaches as cyber-crime skyrockets
January 14, 2017
British firms were each subjected to an average of almost 230,000 cyber attacks in 2016, according to analysis from business internet service provider Beaming. The average volume of attacks hitting individual company firewalls passed the 1,000 per day mark for the first time in November. Meanwhile, the Payment Card Industry Security Standards Council suggested that UK firms ...
- Detroit Car Makers Allegedly Hacked, Names and Social Security Numbers Stolen
January 13, 2017
Detroit’s Big Three automakers are the latest big companies to become victims of hackers, with a new report now claiming that employees’ names and social security numbers might have been exposed during a breach. Details are very sketchy at the moment, and there is no confirmation from the involved companies, but according to the 7 Action ...
