101010.pl is one of the many independent Mastodon servers you can use to participate in the fediverse.
101010.pl czyli najstarszy polski serwer Mastodon. Posiadamy wpisy do 2048 znaków.

Server stats:

577
active users

#oracle

16 posts15 participants3 posts today

DATE: April 10, 2025 at 08:51AM
SOURCE: HEALTHCARE INFO SECURITY

Direct article link at end of text block below.

Is #Oracle's potential involvement in #TikTok's divestiture a bad idea for #nationalsecurity and #dataprivacy? t.co/kpeu0TeFx8

Here are any URLs found in the article text:

t.co/kpeu0TeFx8

Articles can be found by scrolling down the page at healthcareinfosecurity.com/ under the title "Latest"

-------------------------------------------------

Private, vetted email list for mental health professionals: clinicians-exchange.org

Healthcare security & privacy posts not related to IT or infosec are at @HIPAABot . Even so, they mix in some infosec with the legal & regulatory information.

-------------------------------------------------

#security #healthcare #doctors #itsecurity #hacking #doxxing #psychotherapy #securitynews #psychotherapist #mentalhealth #psychiatry #hospital #socialwork #datasecurity #webbeacons #cookies #HIPAA #privacy #datanalytics #healthcaresecurity #healthitsecurity #patientrecords @infosec #telehealth #netneutrality #socialengineering

Continued thread

#Amazon, #Microsoft and #Google are operating #datacentres that use vast amounts of water in some of the world’s driest areas and are building many more, the non-profit investigatory organisation #SourceMaterial and the Guardian have found.

With Donald Trump pledging to support them, the three #technology giants are planning hundreds of datacentres in the US and across the globe, with a potentially huge impact on populations already living with #water scarcity.

#AI / #ProjectStargate / #OpenAI / #Oracle / #SoftBank / #MGX <theguardian.com/environment/20>

The Guardian · Revealed: Big tech’s new datacentres will take water from the world’s driest areasBy Luke Barratt

DATE: April 09, 2025 at 03:48PM
SOURCE: HEALTHCARE INFO SECURITY

Direct article link at end of text block below.

Senate Intel Vice Chair @MarkWarner Prods #Trump Over #TikTok Plans: Says Talk of #Oracle's Involvement Worrisome Due to Recent #Data Breaches t.co/kpeu0TeFx8

Here are any URLs found in the article text:

t.co/kpeu0TeFx8

Articles can be found by scrolling down the page at healthcareinfosecurity.com/ under the title "Latest"

-------------------------------------------------

Private, vetted email list for mental health professionals: clinicians-exchange.org

Healthcare security & privacy posts not related to IT or infosec are at @HIPAABot . Even so, they mix in some infosec with the legal & regulatory information.

-------------------------------------------------

#security #healthcare #doctors #itsecurity #hacking #doxxing #psychotherapy #securitynews #psychotherapist #mentalhealth #psychiatry #hospital #socialwork #datasecurity #webbeacons #cookies #HIPAA #privacy #datanalytics #healthcaresecurity #healthitsecurity #patientrecords @infosec #telehealth #netneutrality #socialengineering

"Passwort" Folge 29: Security-News und Feedback von Oracle bis Web-PKI

Die Reaktionen zeigen: Angriffe auf Smartphones bewegen viele Hörer. Die Passwort-Hosts ärgern sich zudem in der neuesten Folge über Versäumnisse großer Player.

heise.de/news/Passwort-Folge-2

heise online · "Passwort" Folge 29: Security-News und Feedback von Oracle bis Web-PKIBy Dr. Christopher Kunz

#Oracle äußert sich nun zum #Cloud #Datenleck - aber ganz offiziell nur inoffiziell: Nach dem Beginn der Sammelklage gegen das Unternehmen in den USA werden nun Kunden darüber in Kenntnis gesetzt, dass Anmeldeinformationen wie Benutzernamen, Passkeys und verschlüsselte Passwörter in die Hände von Cyberangreifern gelangt sind. Und in der Vergangenheit war regelmäßig nur die Rede von "Legacy Systemen", nun sprechen wir auf einmal über Datensätze aus dem Jahr 2025:

golem.de/news/nach-cyberangrif

🔓 Oracle finally admits to a major data breach—after being sued for hiding it.

Just days after being hit with a class-action lawsuit for allegedly covering up a major data breach, Oracle has begun privately notifying some customers of a security incident that compromised login credentials—including data from as recently as 2024.

Key highlights:
🔓 Hacker accessed usernames, passkeys, and encrypted passwords
💰 Extortion attempt reported
⏱️ Lawsuit claims Oracle failed to notify victims within 60 days
⚖️ Plaintiffs demand better security & transparency

Despite Oracle calling it an outdated system, the lawsuit points to risks that are very current. This is a critical moment for cloud providers to re-evaluate incident response protocols.

Full story: csoonline.com/article/3953644/

CSO Online · Oracle quietly admits data breach, days after lawsuit accused it of cover-upBy Gyana Swain

Larry’s PR angels desperately dance on the head of a pin.

#Oracle is now admitting that, yes, an #OracleCloud service was breached—or so we’re told by deep throat sources. This is, of course, despite last week’s vehement denials.

Yet it’s still not official. And Oracle seems to be justifying its previous denial with a semantic sleight-of-hand worthy of Bill Clinton. In #SBBlogwatch, we see men tic.

@TheFuturumGroup @TechstrongGroup @SecurityBlvd: securityboulevard.com/2025/04/

The thing about Oracle's breach response that really irks me is the sheer audacity and hubris of large conglomerates to treat their customers and the general public with disdain, holding both at arms length, extracting wealth from one while pretending the other doesn't exist unless they show interest.

If you didn't know how predatory Oracle is when it comes to licensing, well here's an example; your downloads of Java and the extensions pack for VirtualBox do not go unnoticed. If they see an arbitrary number of downloads from a range of IP's that they can tie back to a company, they will attempt to strong-arm that company.

They will begin harassing that company with threats of software audit until they comply by buying licensing.

theregister.com/2025/04/02/ora

The Register · Oracle's masterclass in breach comms: Deny, deflect, repeatBy Connor Jones