The women charged with accessing the personal information of 106 million Capital One users also stole data from more than 30 other companies, according to federal prosecutors. U.S. Attorney for ...
The personal details of about 106 million individuals across the US and Canada were stolen in a hack targeting financial services firm Capital One, the company has revealed. The alleged hacker ...
The information was collected when they applied for one of Capital One's credit card products. The hacker also accessed credit status data, including credit scores, balances, payment history ...
The former Amazon engineer charged with hacking into Capital One’s databases and gaining access to customer and applicant information pleaded not guilty to counts of wire fraud and computer ...
Capital One said it identified the hack on July 19. A representative for the U.S. Attorney's office said it was not immediately clear what the suspect's motive was. The incident is expected to ...
and now we learn that the accused Capital One hacker may have hacked thirty other companies. As I’ve argued many times here before, breaches are growing in number and severity. CIOs, CTOs and ...
The hacker gained access to AWS servers rented by Capital One via an alleged server side request forgery (SSRF) attack, the lawmakers’ letter states. While AWS cloud computing competitors Google ...
Furthermore, it's only been 10 days since Capital One said the hack was first discovered; in this statement, Capital One crediting its use of the cloud with the ability to find and fix the problem.