Security News
Australian Craig Wright has finally admitted he is not the inventor of Bitcoin after losing several cases in the High Court of England and Wales, whose judge has suggested he be investigated for perjury. Wright has for years claimed to be Satoshi Nakamoto - the pseudonym used by whoever wrote the whitepaper that defined Bitcoin and created the reference architecture for the cryptocurrency.
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The London law firm which secured a court injunction forbidding ransomware criminals from publishing data stolen from them has now gone a step further - by securing a default judgment from the High Court. 4 New Square Ltd, a barristers' chambers, raised some amusement in cyber security circles in July when it applied for a High Court injunction in the wake of a ransomware infection.
The High Court of Ireland has issued an injunction against the Conti Ransomware gang, demanding that stolen HSE data be returned and not sold or published. Today, Conti released a decryptor for encrypted files but warned that they still intend to publish or sell data stolen during the attack on the HSE. To try and prevent the release of personal and potentially sensitive medical data, the HSE has received an injunction against the Conti ransomware again from the High Court of Ireland.
A landmark High Court ruling has struck down Britain's ability to hack millions of people at a time through so-called "General warrants" in what privacy campaigners are hailing as a major victory. Speaking on Friday afternoon when the judicial review judgment was handed down, Caroline Wilson Palow, PI's legal director, said in a statement: "General warrants are no more permissible today than they were in the 18th century. The government had been getting away with using them for too long. We welcome the High Court's affirmation of these fundamental constitutional principles."
The contents of messages from encrypted chat service EncroChat may be admissible as evidence in English criminal trials, the High Court in London, England has ruled. The ruling, issued late last month, has profound implications for a number of criminal trials brought over evidence obtained from EncroChat messages.
Mobile app developers accused by Facebook of deploying "Malicious" SDKs to scrape users' data from the social network have hit back, telling London's High Court that nearly all their apps were "Not capable" of harvesting data from Facebook itself. Haltas has now hit back, claiming that all but three of his apps couldn't possibly scrape data from Facebook because they didn't use the Login with Facebook feature.
A campaign to sue Facebook over lax privacy policies that allowed Cambridge Analytica to slurp almost a million people's personal data from the social networking website hopes to become a representative action in the High Court, its instigators said today. The campaign said in a statement: "In 2013 and 2014, thousands of people participated in the thisisyourdigitallife app on Facebook. Facebook allowed this app to harvest the data of the app users' friends without their friends' permission or knowledge, including Alvin Carpio, the representative claimant. By taking data without consent, it is alleged that Facebook failed to meet their legal obligations under the Data Protection Act 1998.".
A lawsuit alleging that ex-UKIP leader Richard Braine took part in blackmail and data breaches has been all but thrown out of the High Court as a judge said it was "Without any proper and sound evidential foundation". Amid rival political factions struggling for control of the right-wing party - which launched Nigel Farage's political career before the televisually omnipresent Brexiteer split off to form his own movement - Braine was accused of illicitly accessing party figures' email accounts and the party membership database.
The Supreme Court agreed Monday to decide a case from Georgia about the reach of a federal computer hacking law. The case involves Nathan Van Buren, who was a police sergeant in Cumming, Georgia.