Stories
Slash Boxes
Comments

SoylentNews is people

Submission Preview

Link to Story

US Navy sailors' data breached

Accepted submission by exec at 2016-11-24 16:18:54
News

Story automatically generated by StoryBot Version 0.2.2 rel Testing.
Storybot ('Arthur T Knackerbracket') has been converted to Python3

Note: This is the complete story and will need further editing. It may also be covered
by Copyright and thus should be acknowledged and quoted rather than printed in its entirety.

FeedSource: [BBCTech]

Time: 2016-11-24 12:08:33 UTC

Original URL: http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/technology-38090234 [bbc.co.uk] using utf-8 encoding.

Title: US Navy sailors' data breached

--- --- --- --- --- --- --- Entire Story Below --- --- --- --- --- --- ---
 
 

US Navy sailors' data breached

Arthur T Knackerbracket has found the following story [bbc.co.uk]:

The US Navy is investigating a data breach after personal information of more than 130,000 sailors was accessed.

The breach came after the laptop of an employee at Hewlett Packard Enterprise working on a naval contract was "compromised", the Navy said. [navy.mil]

It added that "unknown individuals" accessed the sensitive information on current and former sailors.

The data included names and social security numbers, but the Navy does not currently believe it was misused.

"The Navy takes this incident extremely seriously - this is a matter of trust for our sailors," said Vice Adm Robert Burke, the chief of naval personnel.

"We are in the early stages of investigating and are working quickly to identify and take care of those affected by this breach."

The US Navy has about 430,000 sailors on active duty or in ready reserve.

Sailors are being contacted in the coming weeks and the Navy said it was looking into credit monitoring services for those affected.

Hewlett Packard Enterprise, which separated from US computer firm HP last year, informed the Navy on 27 October about the laptop.

After a Naval Criminal Investigative Service (NCIS) investigation, it was found that the data of 134,386 sailors had been accessed.

A spokesman for Hewlett Packard Enterprise said: "This event has been reported to the Navy and because this is an ongoing investigation, HPE will not be commenting further out of respect for the privacy of our Navy personnel."

-- submitted from IRC


Original Submission