The Bare Minimum Problem
In AT&T's recent $177M breach settlement, 70M people were eligible for up to $5K each. If everyone claimed, the bill would be $350B. Instead, companies bank on low claim rates.
In AT&T's recent $177M breach settlement, 70M people were eligible for up to $5K each. If everyone claimed, the bill would be $350B. Instead, companies bank on low claim rates.
Allianz Life Insurance confirmed a breach affecting 1.4 million customers in North America. How did attackers get in? Social engineering.
Qantas confirmed a breach affecting up to 6 million customers. The source? A third-party call center platform.
The Everest ransomware group hit Coca-Cola's Dubai bottling partner. When the ransom was ignored, they dumped 1,104 files on dark web forums.
Hertz disclosed a breach affecting over a million people across Hertz, Dollar, and Thrifty brands. The root cause? Zero-day vulnerabilities in a third-party file transfer platform.
Oracle Cloud got hit. 6 million records exfiltrated. More than 140,000 tenants impacted. This is what happens when a single vulnerability cascades across thousands of organizations.