A Catastrophic Hospital Hack Ends in a Leak of 300M Patient Records


The rolling series of breaches targeting customers of cloud platform Snowflake appears to be a supply chain attack wrapped in another supply chain attack. A hacker who claims to have been involved in the attacks tells WIRED that the hackers, known as ShinyHunter, stole victims’ Snowflake credentials by first breaching an employee of a third-party contractor. (The contractor, however, says it does not believe it was involved.)

Ultimately, the breach of the Snowflake customer accounts, which include Ticketmaster, banking firm Santander, and potentially more than 160 other companies, was possible because their Snowflake accounts did not have multifactor authentication enabled.

Antivirus giant Kaspersky’s worst nightmare has finally come true: The United States government announced on Thursday that it is banning the sale of its software to new customers in the US over alleged Russian national security threats. (Kaspersky has challenged the Biden administration’s claims.) Existing customers, meanwhile, will be banned from downloading Kaspersky software updates after September 29. What could go wrong?

Perplexity AI, an artificial-intelligence-powered search startup, says it’s already valued at a billion dollars. But a WIRED investigation published this week found that its secret sauce has a pungent ingredient: bullshit.

Beyond “hallucinating” details generated by its chatbot, WIRED found that the AI tool appears to be ignoring the Robots Exclusion Protocol—a standard web tool used to prevent scraping—on sites owned by WIRED’s parent company, Condé Nast, and other publications, seemingly allowing it to scrape articles despite the internet equivalent of a “Do Not Enter” sign hanging on WIRED and other Condé Nast sites. Perplexity’s chatbot later plagiarized that same article when prompted.

People traveling through some of the largest train stations in the United Kingdom secretly had their faces scanned by Amazon’s face-recognition tools, according to documents obtained by WIRED. The technology, which was used as part of a trial run, predicted travelers’ various attributes, including gender, age, and likely emotions. The surveillance, which one privacy advocate…

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