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A U.S. judge granted preliminary approval on Friday to a $177-million settlement that resolves lawsuits against AT&T over ...
One of the incidents resulted in the illegal downloading of about 109 million customer accounts at the U.S. wireless company.
U.S. District Judge Ada Brown in the federal court in Dallas, Texas, said in a ruling that the class-action settlement was ...
Plus: Ukrainian hackers reportedly knock out a key Russian internet provider, China’s Salt Typhoon hackers claim another ...
U.S. District Judge Ada Brown in Dallas has preliminarily approved a $177M settlement for lawsuits brought against AT&T (NYSE ...
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - A US judge granted preliminary approval on Friday to a $177 million settlement that resolves lawsuits ...
Telecommunications firm AT&T Inc.(T) has reached a $177 million preliminary settlement to put to rest a series of lawsuits ...
Some say more than 16.5 billion credentials are involved. One thing is for sure: the dark web is swimming in stolen data.
The data accounts for 16 billion records, which adds up to about two passwords for every person on the planet.
Information tied to customers’ insurance claims and personal data may also have been breached in the cyberattack, Aflac said.
A representative for the settlement did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
According to a report published by Cybernews this week, login information for 16 billion accounts has been leaked online. The number is double the world’s entire population. “This is the mother of all ...