National public data breach: 2.7bn records of US, Canadian, and UK citizens have been leaked (www.techrepublic.com)
from yogthos@lemmy.ml to privacy@lemmy.ml on 15 Aug 2024 18:39
https://lemmy.ml/post/19186153

#privacy

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GolfNovemberUniform@lemmy.ml on 15 Aug 2024 18:41 next collapse

Another reminder to use privacy-respecting stuff and fake identities for as much as possible online.

madeindjs@programming.dev on 18 Aug 00:38 collapse

Do you know if a browser extension allow to fill Signup form with fake data ?

GolfNovemberUniform@lemmy.ml on 18 Aug 03:37 collapse

Why don’t you just enter random data yourself every time?

madeindjs@programming.dev on 18 Aug 12:57 collapse

Because I’m lazy haha. I found this one for Firefox which is perfect !

EndOfLine@lemm.ee on 15 Aug 2024 18:54 next collapse

National Public Data scrapes the personally identifying information of billions of individuals from non-public sources

Honest question: If these sources are non-public, how did National Public Data get access?

Facetious questions: If they are using private or restricted sources of data accumulation on an international scale, should they be calling themselves National Public Data? Seems like Global Private Data would be more fitting.

possiblylinux127@lemmy.zip on 15 Aug 2024 21:01 collapse

I smell a lawsuit

interdimensionalmeme@lemmy.ml on 16 Aug 2024 06:27 collapse

Your 0.0034$ is in the mail

floofloof@lemmy.ca on 15 Aug 2024 20:23 next collapse

claimed to have access to the personal data of 2.9 billion people from the U.S., U.K., and Canada

How does that work, when the total population of those countries is less than 0.5 billion?

EndOfLine@lemm.ee on 15 Aug 2024 21:57 collapse

As individuals will each have multiple records associated with them, one for each of their previous home addresses, the breach does not expose information about 2.7 billion different people. Furthermore, according to BleepingComputer, some impacted individuals have confirmed that the SSN associated with their info in the data dump is not correct.

possiblylinux127@lemmy.zip on 15 Aug 2024 20:59 next collapse

Spoiler: it is only a fraction of that

They duplicated records and hoped no one would notice. Don’t believe me? Look at the data yourself or find someone who has.

adespoton@lemmy.ca on 16 Aug 2024 04:39 collapse

They appear to have Experian or TransUnion data which provides multiple records for a single individual. If they pulled in records from multiple sources, (eg, all the credit agencies), then the number of records per person would balloon rapidly.

The worrying thing is that if these are timestamped, that set of data can tell an awful lot about a person that’s useful for identity theft.

possiblylinux127@lemmy.zip on 16 Aug 2024 04:51 collapse

They are actually identical according to posts I’ve scene online

adespoton@lemmy.ca on 16 Aug 2024 02:49 collapse

If they have my data and it includes a SSN, I can guarantee it’s not accurate.