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Woman killed, man shot by police
Woman killed, man shot by police

RNZ News

time5 days ago

  • RNZ News

Woman killed, man shot by police

A woman is dead after being shot by the police officers called to her home over concerns for her safety. A man remains in hospital in a stable condition after also being shot by police. Officers were called to the Kainga Ora property in the Christchurch suburb of Bryndwr about 11 o'clock last night after a person who knew the pair reported concerns for their safety as the man had a knife. 10 police officers went to the home with one officer armed with a long-rifle firing a single round at the man and another round at the woman. Timothy Brown reports. Tags: To embed this content on your own webpage, cut and paste the following: See terms of use.

SEC seeks SolarWinds settlement in reversal for agency under new leadership
SEC seeks SolarWinds settlement in reversal for agency under new leadership

Yahoo

time08-07-2025

  • Business
  • Yahoo

SEC seeks SolarWinds settlement in reversal for agency under new leadership

This story was originally published on Cybersecurity Dive. To receive daily news and insights, subscribe to our free daily Cybersecurity Dive newsletter. The Securities and Exchange Commission has reached a settlement with SolarWinds and the company's chief information security officer, Timothy Brown, to resolve charges stemming from the Russian-backed cyberattack on the company's systems. The parties 'have reached a settlement in principle that would completely resolve this litigation,' the SEC said in a filing last week with the federal judge in New York who is overseeing the commission's lawsuit against the company. The judge quickly approved the SEC's request to stay deadlines in the case, including oral arguments previously scheduled for July 22. 'The Court congratulates counsel and the parties on this productive development,' the judge said. He gave SolarWinds, Brown and the SEC until Sept. 12 to either file settlement paperwork or provide a status update on the settlement process. Russian state-linked hackers breached SolarWinds starting in late 2019 and injected malicious code into its Orion IT monitoring software as part of an operation to penetrate the networks of SolarWinds' customers. The attack was not discovered and revealed to the public until December 2020. The supply-chain attack led to one of the worst cyber espionage campaigns in history, compromising at least nine U.S. federal agencies and more than 100 private companies. The SolarWinds attack prompted widespread government and private-sector reassessments of supply chain cyber risks, as well as new attention to the security of software development environments. In October 2023, the SEC sued SolarWinds and Brown, arguing that they 'defrauded investors by overstating SolarWinds' cybersecurity practices and understating or failing to disclose known risks.' (A judge dismissed most of the original charges last year.) The commission also charged four SolarWinds customers for allegedly misleading investors about the extent of their exposure to the breach. It is unclear why the SEC chose to settle the SolarWinds case, and an agency spokesperson declined to comment on its rationale. But when the then Democratic-led commission brought the charges, the two Republican appointees dissented, later criticizing the commission for 'playing Monday morning quarterback' by second-guessing SolarWinds' decisions. After President Donald Trump took office and appointed a new SEC chair, those two commissioners became part of the agency's Republican majority. SolarWinds declined to disclose the terms of the settlement. 'We are pleased with the potential resolution and happy to focus on driving our business forward without distraction,' a spokesperson said. Adam Hickey, a partner at Mayer Brown and a former federal prosecutor handling cyber and national security cases, said an examination of the eventual settlement terms would reveal 'whether and to what extent the SEC is abandoning certain theories or allegations.' 'So far, the SEC has not moved to rescind the rule requiring cybersecurity disclosures in annual and periodic reports,' he said. 'The settlement may or may not point in that direction.' Recommended Reading Five Guys discloses hack of 2 employees' emails Sign in to access your portfolio

US SEC, SolarWinds reach preliminary deal to end breach lawsuit
US SEC, SolarWinds reach preliminary deal to end breach lawsuit

Reuters

time02-07-2025

  • Business
  • Reuters

US SEC, SolarWinds reach preliminary deal to end breach lawsuit

NEW YORK, July 2 (Reuters) - The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission has reached a deal in principle with SolarWinds Corp and its top security officer to end litigation tied to a Russia-linked cyberattack involving the software firm, they said in a court filing on Wednesday. The SEC, SolarWinds and its chief information security officer, Timothy Brown, asked a federal judge on Wednesday to stay court proceedings while they finalize paperwork for a settlement. The judge granted their motion, filings showed. In what was seen as a landmark case, the SEC sued the software company and its top security executive in connection with a two-year cyberattack known as Sunburst that targeted Austin, Texas-based SolarWinds. A judge dismissed much of the regulator's case last year. The SEC had said that the defendants defrauded investors by concealing security weaknesses, but U.S. District Judge Paul Engelmayer, who approved the stay, had said that the claims were based on "hindsight and speculation." An SEC spokesperson declined to comment on the matter beyond the public filings. SolarWinds did not immediately respond to requests for comment. The parties said they planned to file settlement paperwork or a joint status report by September 12.

US SEC, SolarWinds reach preliminary deal to end breach lawsuit
US SEC, SolarWinds reach preliminary deal to end breach lawsuit

CNA

time02-07-2025

  • Business
  • CNA

US SEC, SolarWinds reach preliminary deal to end breach lawsuit

NEW YORK :The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission has reached a deal in principle with SolarWinds Corp and its top security officer to end litigation tied to a Russia-linked cyberattack involving the software firm, they said in a court filing on Wednesday. The SEC, SolarWinds and its chief information security officer, Timothy Brown, asked a federal judge on Wednesday to stay court proceedings while they finalize paperwork for a settlement. The judge granted their motion, filings showed. In what was seen as a landmark case, the SEC sued the software company and its top security executive in connection with a two-year cyberattack known as Sunburst that targeted Austin, Texas-based SolarWinds. A judge dismissed much of the regulator's case last year. The SEC had said that the defendants defrauded investors by concealing security weaknesses, but U.S. District Judge Paul Engelmayer, who approved the stay, had said that the claims were based on "hindsight and speculation."

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