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Google Chrome Issues Critical Update to Patch High-Severity Flaws, Including Actively Exploited Vulnerability

Google Chrome critical update fixes 4 security flaws, including an active exploit. Patch to v136.0.7103.113/.114 now for Windows, Mac, Linux.

16-May-2025
4 min read

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Utility

Electricity

Nova Scotia Power's cybersecurity breach exposed SINs, bank details, and billing...

**Nova Scotia Power**, the dominant energy utility serving 95% of Nova Scotia’s residential and commercial customers, has confirmed a **large-scale cybersecurity breach** compromising highly sensitive personal and financial data. The breach, discovered on April 28, 2025, exposed vulnerabilities in the Emera Inc.-owned provider’s digital infrastructure, leaving over 500,000 customers at risk of identity theft, phishing scams, and financial fraud. Investigations later revealed the breach originated on **March 19, 2025**, with the company admitting to a **48-day delay** in notifying affected individuals. ### **Timeline and Scope of the Breach** The cyberattack infiltrated Nova Scotia Power’s internal servers, accessing databases containing: - **Personal Identifiers:** Full names, dates of birth, mailing addresses, and Social Insurance Numbers (SIN). - **Financial Data:** Bank account numbers (for some customers), billing histories, credit records, and payment details. - **Utility-Specific Information:** Service addresses, electricity consumption patterns, customer correspondence, and program participation records. While the utility confirmed its **32,000-kilometer power grid** and energy production systems remained unaffected, the breach disrupted internal operations during containment efforts. Cybersecurity analysts estimate the stolen data could enable criminals to impersonate customers, apply for fraudulent loans, or launch targeted phishing campaigns. ### **Delayed Notification Sparks Public Outcry** Nova Scotia Power’s admission that customers were not alerted until late May—**nearly two months post-breach**—has drawn sharp criticism. Critics argue the delay violates Canada’s *Digital Privacy Act*, which mandates prompt disclosure of data breaches posing _“significant harm.”_ _“Notifications are being mailed to impacted account holders with details on resources and support,”_ the company stated in its May 28 update. However, cybersecurity experts warn that delayed alerts heighten risks, as threat actors often exploit stolen data immediately. ### **Mitigation Measures and Customer Support** To address concerns, Nova Scotia Power announced: - **Two Years of Free Credit Monitoring:** Partnering with TransUnion to provide comprehensive identity theft protection. - **Dedicated Support Hotlines:** For customers to verify if their data was compromised. - **Phishing Awareness Campaigns:** Urging vigilance against fraudulent emails or calls impersonating the utility. _“While there’s no evidence of misuse, we encourage customers to monitor their accounts and report suspicious activity,”_ the company emphasized. ### **Sector-Wide Implications for Critical Infrastructure** The breach underscores growing concerns about cybersecurity in **energy utilities**, which manage vast troves of sensitive customer data alongside critical infrastructure. Nova Scotia Power, which generates **10,000 GWh annually** and serves as the province’s economic backbone, now faces scrutiny over its cybersecurity investments. _“Utilities are prime targets for cybercriminals due to their operational and data value,”_ said Halifax-based cybersecurity analyst Mark Tynes. _“This breach should serve as a wake-up call for stricter protocols across the sector.”_ ### **What Customers Should Do Now** 1. **Monitor Financial Accounts:** Flag unauthorized transactions to banks immediately. 2. **Enable Fraud Alerts:** Contact credit bureaus (Equifax, TransUnion) to lock credit files. 3. **Verify Communications:** Nova Scotia Power will never request sensitive data via email or phone. 4. **Use Provided Resources:** Enroll in TransUnion’s credit monitoring using the activation code included in mailed notices. No ransomware group has claimed responsibility, leaving the motive unclear. However, the breadth of the stolen data—particularly SINs and bank details—creates long-term risks. Cybersecurity firm SecureNova [warns](https://www.nspower.ca/) that **dark web markets** could monetize this information for years, necessitating perpetual vigilance. Nova Scotia Power has yet to clarify why its intrusion detection systems failed to flag the March 19 breach earlier. Regulatory bodies, including the **Nova Scotia Utility and Review Board**, are expected to launch an independent audit of the company’s cybersecurity framework.

loading..   16-May-2025
loading..   3 min read
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Coinbase

Coinbase's repeat data breach exposes 97k users: Offshore contractors blamed. Id...

Cryptocurrency marketplace Coinbase faces mounting backlash after confirming hackers stole sensitive data, including passports, bank details, and Social Security numbers—from nearly 97,000 users. This breach, the **third major security incident since 2021**, exposes a reckless pattern of outsourcing critical operations to offshore contractors while lobbying against regulatory safeguards. The hackers infiltrated systems by bribing overseas support staff, a tactic reminiscent of **2021 phishing attacks** that compromised 6,000 user accounts. Unlike competitors like Binance, which invested $300 million in AI-driven threat detection this year, Coinbase has prioritized cost-cutting over robust security, critics allege. ### **"A Identity Thief’s Goldmine”** The stolen data—unmasked government IDs, transaction histories, and banking identifiers—creates lifelong risks for victims. - **Hypothetical fallout:** A leaked passport could enable fraudulent loans, home purchases, or even criminal impersonation. - **By the numbers:** 42% of crypto users report identity theft attempts post-breach (2023 CipherTrace Report). _“This isn’t just data—it’s people’s lives,”_ said *Maria Gonzalez*, a Coinbase user whose driver’s license was stolen. _“Coinbase promised security, but they sold us out.”_ ### **Empty Promises While Unanswered Questions** Coinbase [claims](https://www.coinbase.com/blog/protecting-our-customers-standing-up-to-extortionists) it will launch a U.S.-based support hub and “strengthen defenses,” but skeptics dismiss this as déjà vu. In 2022, CEO Brian Armstrong pledged a “top-to-bottom security overhaul” that ultimately failed to materialize. - **Critical gaps:** Why did offshore contractors in India and the Philippines have unfettered access to unmasked IDs without real-time monitoring? - **Regulatory defiance:** In 2023, Coinbase spent $3.8 million lobbying against SEC oversight, including rules that mandate breach disclosures within 72 hours. _“This is corporate negligence dressed as innovation,”_ said *Sen. Elizabeth Warren*, who recently accused crypto firms of _“weaponizing secrecy to evade accountability.”_ ### **How Outsourcing Fueled the Data Breach** 1. **Offshore access:** Low-cost contractors in high-risk regions accessed core systems with minimal oversight. 2. **Delayed detection:** Hackers infiltrated systems for months before Coinbase took action. 3. **Ransom gambit:** Hackers demanded $20 million, but experts warn the long-term liability for users could exceed $2 billion. _*John Carter, a former Coinbase security engineer who resigned in 2022*_, revealed: _“Leadership ignored repeated warnings about contractor vulnerabilities. Profit trumped safety.”_ ### **Crypto’s House of Cards** The breach amplifies fears that decentralized finance is a haven for lax security: - **Historical parallels:** Mt. Gox’s 2014 collapse ($460M stolen), FTX’s fraud, and now Coinbase’s systemic failures. - **Investor flight:** “This sets back institutional adoption by years,” said *Rachel Kim*, a blockchain fund manager. _“How can we trust an industry that won’t protect its users?”_

loading..   16-May-2025
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Scattered Spider

M&S cyberattack by Scattered Spider exposes customer data; triggers 15% stock cr...

A ruthless [cyberattack](https://www.secureblink.com/cyber-security-news/marks-and-spencer-hit-by-major-cyberattack-click-and-collect-services-disrupted) has ignited chaos at British retail titan Marks & Spencer (M&S), as the 140-year-old institution faces its most crippling crisis in decades. The Scattered Spider syndicate—a global hacking collective linked to audacious strikes on Caesars Entertainment and MGM Resorts—has infiltrated M&S’s defenses, plundering vast troves of customer data and triggering a 15% stock market freefall that has left investors reeling. For over three weeks, the retailer’s £1.4 billion online empire has been paralyzed, its reputation hanging by a thread, while executives wage a desperate battle to stem the bleeding. ### **How the Attack Unfolded** The nightmare began on **April 25**, when M&S abruptly halted all online orders without explanation, leaving millions of customers in the dark. Behind the scenes, cyber mercenaries linked to Scattered Spider — a shadowy syndicate of English-speaking hackers — infiltrated M&S’s systems in what insiders describe as a “surgical strike” targeting personal customer data. While M&S claims payment details and passwords were *not* compromised (as card data is outsourced to third parties), hackers accessed **names, addresses, contact information, and purchase histories** — a goldmine for identity theft and phishing schemes. The breach forced M&S to freeze its £1.4 billion e-commerce platform for over 21 days, triggering a **15% stock plunge** and wiping hundreds of millions off its market value. _“This wasn’t just a hack — it was a *financial hemorrhage*,”_ declared a City of London analyst. _“M&S’s reputation is bleeding out.”_ ### **Scattered Spider’s Global Reign of Terror** The attack has been pinned on **Scattered Spider**, a cybercrime cabal also known as **Octo Tempest** and **Muddled Libra**, whose members operate from the UK, U.S., and beyond. The group gained global notoriety in 2023 for crippling Las Vegas titans **Caesars Entertainment** and **MGM Resorts**, extracting a staggering **$15 million ransom** from Caesars in a single stroke. Sources reveal Scattered Spider’s UK wing is allegedly led by **Tyler Buchanan**, a 23-year-old tech savant from Dundee, Scotland, who operated under the alias *“Tylerb”* on encrypted platforms. Buchanan was reportedly arrested in Spain last summer and extradited to California in **April 2025** to face charges — though his alleged associates continue their rampage. Meanwhile, U.S. operations are spearheaded by **Noah Urban**, aka *“King Bob”*, a hacker linked to high-profile ransomware schemes. The group’s signature blend of **social engineering, phishing, and ransomware** has made them one of the most feared entities in cybercrime. ### **Inside the Fallout: Panic, Profits, and a Retail Giant Under Siege** As M&S races to restore systems with help from cybersecurity firm **DarkTrace**, law enforcement, and the UK’s National Cyber Security Centre (NCSC), questions mount over how hackers bypassed defenses at a company serving **30 million loyal customers**. **Key Revelations:** - **Customer Trust Erodes:** Despite M&S’s assurances, experts warn stolen personal data could fuel *targeted scams*. “Imagine getting a fake ‘M&S voucher’ email — that’s just the start,” said cybersecurity expert Dr. Elena Voss. - **Physical Stores Survive, But Stock Market Carnage Continues:** While M&S’s 1,000 UK stores remain open, investors are fleeing. Shares have cratered to a 12-month low, with analysts predicting long-term brand damage. - **The 2025 Extradition Twist:** Tyler Buchanan’s reported extradition timeline raises eyebrows. Legal experts question how a 2025 date aligns with his 2023 arrest — suggesting either a typo or a prolonged legal saga. ### **We Will Not Be Broken** In a fiery statement, M&S CEO Stuart Machin vowed: _“We are working tirelessly to protect our customers and emerge stronger. This attack will *not* define us.”_ The retailer has launched a 24/7 helpline for affected shoppers and pledged free credit monitoring. Yet critics accuse M&S of downplaying risks. _“Calling this ‘sophisticated’ is corporate jargon for *‘we were outsmarted*,’”_ snapped retail analyst Priya Kapoor. The M&S debacle underscores a chilling reality: no company, however venerable, is safe from Scattered Spider’s evolving tactics. With ties to Russia’s ALPHV/BlackCat ransomware group, the gang epitomizes the borderless, mercenary nature of modern cyberwarfare.

loading..   14-May-2025
loading..   4 min read