Privacy breaches at Rouge Valley hospital may have affected Ajax-Pickering patients

Privacy breaches at Rouge Valley hospital may have affected Ajax-Pickering patients

Ontario’s privacy commissioner has found the Rouge Valley Health System failed to protect patient health information following a review of two separate privacy breaches, which may have affected patients at both Centenary and Ajax-Pickering hospitals.

http://m.durhamregion.com/news-story/5211578-privacy-breaches-at-rouge-valley-hospital-may-have-affected-ajax-pickering-patients/

The best Android phones you can buy right now

The best part about picking out a new Android phone is the huge level of choice and diversity the platform provides: With so many different manufacturers creating devices, there’s something available for practically every purpose and preference imaginable.

But you know what? That can also be the worst part about picking out a new Android phone. With so many choices, it can be damn-near impossible to make a decision and figure out which one is right for you.

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‘Critical’ security bugs dating back to 1987 found in X Window

X.org, which develops the open-source X Window System for Linux and other Unix-y desktops, has warned security flaws have been discovered in the code – and some of them have been hanging around for 27 years.

The bugs can be exploited by applications to crash the window system, or run malicious code as the root user if the X server is running with those privileges.

The programming blunders were discovered by Ilja van Sprundel, a security researcher at IOActive, and cover how the X Server handles requests from client apps.

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Using No-IP for your #EMR? Be careful!

Using No-IP for your #EMR? Be careful!

Microsoft Appoints Itself Sheriff of the Internet

“Microsoft contends it seized domains to stop distribution of two widely used malware tools

It was 7 o’clock in the morning when the knocking on Dan Durrer’s front door woke him up. His dog started barking, and Durrer thought he was getting an early morning package. But when he opened the door, he wasn’t greeted by the FedEx man. He was face-to-face with a process server, a messenger from the courts, who handed him a stack of legal documents—three inches thick. Somewhere in that stack—buried in all the legalese—was the news that Microsoft had taken control of his company, but Durrer didn’t have time to read it. Almost immediately, his pager lit up with messages saying the company’s internet services had stopped working.

For the past 15 years, Durrer has worked as the CEO of a small internet service provider called No-IP. Based on Reno, Nevada, the 16-person company offers a special kind of Domain Name System service, or DNS, for consumers and small businesses, letting them reliably connect to computers whose IP addresses happen to change from time to time. It’s used by geeks obsessed with online security, fretful parents monitoring nanny cams in their toddler’s bedrooms, and retailers who want remote access to their cash registers. But it’s also used by criminals as a way of maintaining malicious networks of hacked computers across the internet, even if the cops try to bring them down.

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Other articles:

Four million domains have been shutdown, despite the fact that Microsoft only wants 18,472 of them