breach

“Sometimes I Forget I’m Already Living a Dream Life” – Timaya Questions the Meaning of Success

MusicNigerian music star Timaya has shared a reflective message about success and personal fulfillment.In his post, he questioned the idea of ever...

Lil Wayne speaks out after feeling overlooked by Coachella and the Grammys

Music Lil Wayne reacts to Coachell and Grammys snub Award-winning rapper Lil Wayne has sparked conversation online after sharing a candid message about feeling excluded...

Kehlani at 30: How ‘Folded’ Changed Everything | Billboard Women In Music 2026

MusicBillboard Women in Music 2026 Impact Award recipient Kehlani takes us deep into her creative process and emotional journey behind her hit “Folded”...

LastPass data breach led to $53K in Bitcoin stolen, lawsuit alleges

A class action is seeking damages from the password manager following a data breach in August 2022...

Third-party data breach round-up: mscripts, Diligent, Mailchimp

This month, more than 114,000 individuals may have experienced personally identifiable information and protected health information exposures from these incidents, while an email marketing hack is a new source for phishing attacks. Medication adherence platform mscripts breached On January 17, mscripts, a cloud-based mobile pharmacy platform that focuses on patient engagement and medication adherence solutions

T-Mobile data breach shows API security can’t be ignored

Enterprise security isn’t easy. Small oversights around systems and vulnerabilities can result in data breaches that impact millions of users. Unfortunately, one of the most common oversights is in the realm of APIs. Just yesterday, T-Mobile revealed that a threat actor stole the personal information of 37 million postpaid and prepaid customer accounts via an exposed

Twitter data breach shows APIs are a goldmine for PII and social engineering 

Check out all the on-demand sessions from the Intelligent Security Summit here. A Twitter API vulnerability shipped in June 2021 (and later patched) has come back to haunt the organization. In December, one hacker claimed to have the personal data of 400 million users for sale on the dark web, and just yesterday, attackers released

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