2012: Looking back at the major hacks, leaks and data breaches
Summary: ZDNet looks back at the year, on a month-by-month basis, at some of the most publicized hacks, leaks and data breaches of 2012.
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Dozens of data breaches, millions affected
During 2012, almost every industry -- from banking to insurance, government departments and even security companies that help to protect against such attacks -- were hacked or breached and vast amounts of data siphoned off from company networks.
Many of the successful attacks came from those part of or connected with hacking collective Anonymous, but not all. From Social Security record breaches to a year of poor company policies on password and user details protection, along with massive hacking attacks that gave the ordinary citizen an insight into the shady private intelligence world, here's a look back at some of the major hacks, leaks and breaches of the year.
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Talkback
And yet, we still tout the "security" of "the cloud"
Truth be known - if you're a cloud provider, you've probably been hacked. And you might not even know it.
Yet, here we are, in an age where we claim cloud computing is "more secure."
It's not more secure. In fact, the hacks against the cloud are far more scary and the stolen information far more important than anything we've seen against desktop PCs.
Hack one person? You get one credit card number. Hack a cloud provider? You get EVERYBODY's credit card number.
Frankly, it's time to re-think "the cloud" and how to provide security. Maybe "the cloud" isn't such a good idea for everything after all.
It's not the cloud.
It's not the Cloud????
Unfortunate Article Format - Poor editorial decision