I look forward to the settlement in which the company that collects my information with no consent and no opt-out and then fails to secure that information offers me credit monitoring that I can already get for free. Some lawyers will get very rich, though.
jayemar · 15h ago
How do you get free credit monitoring?
pards · 19h ago
> The threat actor had accessed the company’s GitHub account and accessed "some software artifacts as well as some personal information."
LexisNexis offers software to perform credit checks and sanctions screening so access to their source code is arguably more valuable than any personal data - it could be used to sidestep the regulatory steps in the financial system and facilitate fraud, money laundering etc.
6stringmerc · 19h ago
Now add in the growing trend of using AI generated video / voice emulation and it’s a highly effective attack vector.
It’s already been used to direct funds in Asia from an actual financial institution to thieves. People still get phished on the regular. This is next level.
T3OU-736 · 16h ago
The relation between GutHub creds being compromised and persional (Social Security) numbers being accessed is not obvious, and feels weird.
Were SSNs in a GH repo?
Credentials for GH access grabted access to the database with SSNs in it?
Those both seem, in their own right, quite bad.
paddw · 5h ago
sure sounds like it
“An unauthorized third party acquired certain LNRS data from a third-party platform used for software development. The issue did not affect LNRS’s own networks or systems,” the company said
jeffwask · 14h ago
As an Ops guy, this was my reaction too.
prepend · 20h ago
The article says LNRS is headquartered in Atlanta, but it’s actually Alpharetta. [0]
LexisNexis offers software to perform credit checks and sanctions screening so access to their source code is arguably more valuable than any personal data - it could be used to sidestep the regulatory steps in the financial system and facilitate fraud, money laundering etc.
It’s already been used to direct funds in Asia from an actual financial institution to thieves. People still get phished on the regular. This is next level.
Were SSNs in a GH repo?
Credentials for GH access grabted access to the database with SSNs in it?
Those both seem, in their own right, quite bad.
“An unauthorized third party acquired certain LNRS data from a third-party platform used for software development. The issue did not affect LNRS’s own networks or systems,” the company said
[0] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/LexisNexis_Risk_Solutions