< ciso
brief />
Incidents and Data Breaches Banner

All news in category “Incidents and Data Breaches

2703 articles · page 136 of 136

Medico Inc. S3 Exposure Exposes Nearly 14,000 Records

🏥 UpGuard discovered an open Amazon S3 bucket operated by Medico Inc. that exposed nearly 14,000 files (~1.7 GB), including medical records, explanations of benefits, legal documents, and financial PII such as SSNs and bank account details. The bucket was identified on June 20, 2019 and secured within hours after notification. Exposed items also included internal spreadsheets containing account credentials and passwords, plus scanned checks and unredacted treatment notes. The incident highlights common cloud misconfigurations and the need for stronger vendor controls and data-handling processes.
read more →

AggregateIQ Repositories Expose Brexit Campaign Sites

🔍 This report details UpGuard's review of publicly downloadable development repositories from data analytics firm AggregateIQ, which contained source code, WordPress backups, database exports, and credentials tied to multiple UK political sites. The exposed repositories appear to link AIQ to web assets for several pro-Brexit groups and campaigns. Sensitive items found include API tokens, payment keys, and admin accounts that, if abused, could grant access to live systems and supporter data. The report highlights misconfiguration and credential management failures with potential regulatory consequences under GDPR.
read more →

Engineering Firm Exposes Critical Infrastructure Data

⚠️ UpGuard discovered a public rsync repository exposing data from Power Quality Engineering (PQE), including client inspection reports, infrared imagery and plaintext internal passwords. The July 2017 exposure allowed downloads of hundreds of gigabytes via port 873 and revealed schematics for clients such as Dell, Oracle, Texas Instruments, and the City of Austin, including a SCIF layout. PQE secured the server after notification; the incident highlights the large risk of simple misconfigurations and third‑party vendor failures.
read more →