Everybody Pwned ‘;-- : The Pitfalls of Breach Ubiquity and the Prospects of Bill C-11
February 16, 2021There are changes coming to the information security landscape in Canada.
Bill C-11 was tabled in the House of Commons on December 2, 2020. It's long name: "An Act to enact the Consumer Privacy Protection Act and the Personal Information and Data Protection Tribunal Act and to make related and consequential amendments to other Acts". This proposed legislation comes at a time when Canadian are relying more and more on electronic communication.
Why should you care?
Let's try a little experiment. Go here...
Not willing to put your email in to a random internet site recommended by some random woman you just met over the internet?
I get that.
Let’s use my two main email addresses.
personal email - No breaches reported
work email - Oh oh! - pwned! 1 breach.
NOTE: I was married in 2015 and being ever the romantic I changed my last name to match my spouse. This explains the no breaches on my personal email. My previous personal email had been involved in 7 breaches.
The breach my work email with was discovered by two security researchers. They found an unprotected server belonging to People Data Labs holding 1.2 billion records of personal information (email address, phone numbers, social media profiles, job history data). It’s unclear whether this information came from a breach or scrape (when someone use credentials that have been compromised to download all the information off of a site OR download all public information that was listed at public that perhaps should not have been).
People Data Labs is an aggregator - they collect publicly facing or available information and resell access to that information. Information has more meaning and value when it’s all put together.
Do I feel violated? … not really. Most of the information was publicly available - none of it was intensely personal (the closest thing to private information would have been social media profiles - but that’s just photos of cats so no biggy - right?).
(Although we've trained on this issue so much, every time my staff gets a spear-phishing email they report it to me with a great deal of smug satisfaction.)
341 - Data breach reports received under the Privacy Act678 - Data breach reports received under PIPEDA (The highest percentages of which were in the finance, telecommunications, and retail/sales sectors)
- We receive an attack or scan every 60 seconds.
- There are 5-6 credible concerning flags per week.
- We’ve stopped approximately 15 credible ransom ware attempts in the past three years.
- We stopped 4 spear-phishing attacks that would have resulted in potential breach.
s.57(1) Security Safeguards(1) An organization must protect personal information through physical, organizational and technological security safeguards. The level of protection provided by those safeguards must be proportionate to the sensitivity of the information.[...](3) The security safeguards must protect personal information against, among other things, loss, theft and unauthorized access, disclosure, copying, use and modification.
Credit: pentestpartners.com/security-blog |
This post was written by Anna Manley. If you'd like to contact Anna you can send her an email: anna@manleylaw.ca |