The “DWTS” pro was arrested three days after his wedding anniversary with Nikki Bella.
WATCH: Kamala Harris speaks at rally in Georgia
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Creating Serenity at Home with Mindful Decor
Imagine walking into your home and instantly feeling at ease. Mindful decor turns that vision into reality by creating spaces that soothe and calm. By integrating thoughtful design elements, you can cultivate an atmosphere of peace in every room. Dive into these creative ways to fill your space with serenity, making each corner […]
The post Creating Serenity at Home with Mindful Decor appeared first on Upscale Living Mag.
Fox News Politics: Harris in the Hot Seat
Lawsuits Pile Up After Company Confirms Social Security Numbers Were Hacked
Lawsuits Pile Up After Company Confirms Social Security Numbers Were Hacked
Authored by Jack Phillips via The Epoch Times (emphasis ours),
More lawsuits have been filed against background check company National Public Data (NPD) after it confirmed that a major data breach exposed Americans’ personal records, including Social Security numbers.
Earlier in August, the breach became more widely known after a class-action lawsuit was filed against the Florida-based company, alleging that 2.9 billion records that included Social Security numbers were leaked online and put up for sale for $3.5 million on the dark web.
Days later, NPD confirmed a data breach in a letter to the Maine attorney general’s office and in a statement on its website, although it said that only 1.3 million people’s records were leaked.
But this week and late last week, several more lawsuits were filed against the firm, including one filed by two women on Aug. 23 in the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Florida. So far, more than a dozen suits have been filed against NPD or its parent company, Jerico Pictures, since early August, according to a review of the Justia database.
NPD said that a “data security incident” from an attempted hack by a “third-party bad actor” led to the breach, according to a statement posted on its website last week.
There was an attempted hack of its systems in December 2023 and “potential leaks of certain data in April 2024 and summer 2024,“ the statement said. ”Additional security measures in efforts to prevent the reoccurrence of such a breach and to protect our systems,” it added.
The company said that if you were potentially affected by the breach you should “closely monitor your financial accounts and if you see any unauthorized activity, you should promptly contact your financial institution.”
Americans are being urged to contact the three largest credit reporting agencies—TransUnion, Equifax, and Experian—to get a free credit report or place a fraud alert on any potential lines of credit that were opened in an unauthorized manner, the company said.
A lawsuit filed on Aug. 1 by Christopher Hoffman, a California resident, alleged the company was hacked by USDoD, a cybercriminal organization, which then posted the database of Social Security numbers and other records on the dark web. His suit further alleged that hackers retrieved data about past addresses, relatives, and other information dating back three decades.
“The present and continuing risk to victims of the data breach will remain for their respective lifetimes,” his lawsuit said.
His lawsuit, as well as others that have been filed since then, accuse NPD of negligence and a breach of fiduciary duty. The firm has not responded to the allegations in court.
The allegations prompted a House committee to open an investigation into the firm, according to a letter sent to the company by several lawmakers.
If the lawsuit is accurate, the “data breach likely represents one of the largest cyberattacks ever in terms of impacted individuals,” the lawmakers wrote. “The Committee requests a briefing to confirm the veracity of the attack, and if accurate, assess the potential impacts of the breach to the U.S. government, businesses, and the American people, as well as National Public Data’s response to the attack.”
In the meantime, at least two websites have been set up to allow people to tell whether their data, including Social Security numbers, have been compromised.
One is operated by Pentester, a cybersecurity testing service, which allows a person to type his or her first name, last name, state, and date of birth. Another site that appeared in the past week or so is www.npdbreach.com, operated by Atlas Privacy, another cybersecurity company.
“We are displaying a redacted version for people to know if they were affected, and if so, is the information correct that was shown about them. Many times it is not. Also, we do not store their searches on npd.pentester.com,” Pentester spokesman Richard Glaser told The Epoch Times.
Tyler Durden
Thu, 08/29/2024 – 17:15
Kamala Harris’s ‘Frankenstein’ Campaign Team Sparks Internal Tension
As the mainstream media continues to paint Kamala Harris’s campaign as “joyous” and full of “good vibes,” internally, the vice president’s “Frankenstein” campaign team has become an “unwieldy” group rife with tension, campaign aides told Axios.
After President Joe Biden abruptly ended his reelection campaign in July and endorsed his vice president, Harris pieced together a campaign team of “competing factions”—including top Biden officials, notable staffers from President Barack Obama’s reelection campaign, and her own aides. This “Frankenstein” team has sparked internal concerns about its “cohesiveness,” six people involved in the campaign told Axios.
Unlike Biden’s campaign, which had a limited number of long-serving aides making major decisions, the novice Harris campaign has become a patched-together team with rival powers, Axios reported.
“The entanglement of these different entities has led to many people feeling a real lack of role clarity,” one person involved in the campaign said.
Harris’s internal staff tension stems from her larger struggle to simultaneously support her boss’s administration and distance herself from its failures. She does not want to push Biden aides aside but also wants to implement her own strategy, which has led to confusion about who’s in charge, those involved in the campaign told Axios.
Harris not only changed the personnel of Biden’s campaign but also its messaging, and some Biden aides are frustrated that they must defend Harris’s support of far-left issues such as Medicare for All and banning fracking.
People involved in the campaign hope that the mere 68 days until Nov. 5 won’t be enough time for tensions within the “clunky organization” to reach their breaking point.
“It’s just a mad dash. Things are colliding occasionally, but it’s not malicious,” said one person involved in the campaign.
The post Kamala Harris’s ‘Frankenstein’ Campaign Team Sparks Internal Tension appeared first on .
Marvell’s stock climbs as earnings report brings an improved growth forecast
The semiconductor company is benefiting from AI traction and expects growing operating leverage.
PFAS-free synthesis of fluorinated pharmaceutical and agrochemical compounds
Chemists have developed a method to furnish a range of molecules with a trifluoromethyl group attached to a sulfur, nitrogen or oxygen atom. Their procedure avoids the use of PFAS reagents. It thus provides an environmentally friendly synthesis route for pharmaceutical and agrochemical compounds that rely on the presence of the trifluoromethyl group.
Researchers attempted to emulate a clinical trial using data from real patients
Researchers used real-world clinical data to attempt to emulate a randomized controlled trial testing the effectiveness of two blood thinners, apixaban and warfarin, to prevent stroke in patients with non-valvular atrial fibrillation. The study provides a method to explore the effects of treatments in patients who are underrepresented or excluded from clinical trials.
Caitlin Clark, Fever teammates ecstatic to meet Olympic gold medalists Simone Biles, Gabby Thomas