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Security

Hackers Scored Corporate Giants' Logins for Asian Data Centers (bloomberg.com) 6

In an episode that underscores the vulnerability of global computer networks, hackers got ahold of login credentials for data centers in Asia used by some of the world's biggest businesses, a potential bonanza for spying or sabotage, according to a cybersecurity research firm. From a report: The previously unreported data caches involve emails and passwords for customer-support websites for two of the largest data center operators in Asia: Shanghai-based GDS Holdings and Singapore-based ST Telemedia Global Data Centres, according to Resecurity, which provides cybersecurity services and investigates hackers. About 2,000 customers of GDS and STT GDC were affected. Hackers have logged into the accounts of at least five of them, including China's main foreign exchange and debt trading platform and four others from India, according to Resecurity, which said it infiltrated the hacking group. It's not clear what -- if anything -- the hackers did with the other logins. The information included credentials in varying numbers for some of the world's biggest companies, including Alibaba Group Holding, Amazon, Apple, BMW, Goldman Sachs, Huawei, Microsoft, and Walmart, according to the security firm and hundreds of pages of documents that Bloomberg reviewed.
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Hackers Scored Corporate Giants' Logins for Asian Data Centers

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  • What's wrong with calling it a good ol' "data dump"? Or has "dump" become a no-no word for some BS PC reasons now?

  • Software and software driven systems are so complex that they cannot reasonably be expected to be perfectly secured. It is all part of the unavoidable complexity collapse sometime in the future.

In any formula, constants (especially those obtained from handbooks) are to be treated as variables.

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