"The Mastagni Holstedt law firm filed the suit in Sacramento Superior Court this week against Lantech LLC, claiming that because of the cyberattack last year, Mastagni Holstedt was forced to pay a ransom to regain access to its data."
@AAKL@YahooNews I would guess it will end in an embarrassment for the law firm. I can't imagine, that a cybersecurity company wouldn't have solid Terms and Conditions.
@AAKL@YahooNews True, they would have had a much better case if they hadn't actively decided to pay the ransom. Or at least insurance providers routinely win denied claim cases based on that theory.
A couple of days old. The product was created after harvesting a ton of online images, but it shows that it's getting much harder to distinguish the real from the fake. #AI
The company's justification is bold, to say the least.
Acemagic developers, "in an effort to enhance user experience by reducing initial boot time, made adjustments to the Microsoft source code, including network settings, without obtaining software digital signatures, and the RGB lighting control software was also without one. This oversight led to isolated reports of virus-infected mini PCs manufactured before November 18, 2023."
That was the first question that came to mind when I saw this post yesterday. The manufacturer is Invenda. apparently a Swiss maker of "intelligent vending solutions."
Their "solutions" are really creepy, offering "facial recognition, real-time inventory control, digital signage, remote pricing and telematics."
"Viamedis, France’s leading provider of medical third-party payment, confirmed on February 1 that it had suffered a data breach." #cybersecurity#infosec