N.L. privacy commissioner investigating government response to school cyberattack
The province's information and privacy commissioner is investigating a security breach that saw hackers steal the private information of nearly 300,000 current and former students and teachers in Newfoundland and Labrador.
In a news release sent Friday afternoon, Privacy Commissioner Kerry Hatfield said part of that investigation will look at whether the Education Department has taken enough action in the wake of the PowerSchool attack to make sure it doesn't happen again.
"Before launching this investigation I felt it was appropriate to give the department sufficient time to assess the impact of the breach, notify those who were impacted, and take steps to adjust its policies and practices," she said in the release. "It has now had ample opportunity to do so."
The late-December cyberattack struck PowerSchool, the data management software used by the English, French and Indigenous school systems — along with other school districts across North America.
According to the Education Department, on Dec. 28 hackers stole the information of approximately 271,000 students and 14,400 teachers across Newfoundland and Labrador's English, French, and Indigenous school systems.
The stolen data includes contact information, date of birth, MCP numbers, medical alert information, custodial alert information, some social insurance numbers and other related information. Some of that data dates back to 1995.
The department said about 75 per cent of the stolen student data belongs to people who are no longer in the K-12 system.
The company offered two years of free identity and credit monitoring to any of the victims, and has since hired Experian and TransUnion to provide those services.
"The purpose of my investigation is not only to assess whether the department has responded adequately to the breach, but also to ensure that measures taken by the department to prevent future occurrences of this nature are sufficient," said Hatfield.
"People have a right to expect that when a public body collects their sensitive personal information that it will do so in accordance with the law."
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Chicago Tribune
an hour ago
- Chicago Tribune
After talks with Zelenskyy and Macron, US senators warn: Putin ‘is preparing for more war'
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Graham called it 'the most draconian bill I've ever seen in my life in the Senate.' 'The world has a lot of cards to play against Putin,' he said. 'We're going to hit China and India for propping up his war machine.' With peace talks yielding little and Trump's approach to Ukraine highly uncertain, Graham and Blumenthal have stepped into the breach — blunt emissaries on a lonely mission. Political opposites moving in lockstep, they're crossing Europe, and the aisle, with the moral urgency of two men trying to forestall another Russian offensive before it's too late. Peace talks are scheduled to resume Monday in Istanbul. But Ukrainian officials say Moscow has yet to submit a serious proposal — a delay both senators described as deliberate and dangerous. 'Putin is playing President Trump,' Blumenthal said. 'He's taking him for a sucker.' 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Fox Sports
2 hours ago
- Fox Sports
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2 hours ago
Putin is preparing for more war, US senators warn, urging swift sanctions and global action
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