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PHOTO: RON JENKINS/GETTY IMAGES
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Hackers stole employee and visitor data from global entertainment services company Legends International. Legends runs 350 venues worldwide, including AT&T Stadium, home to NFL team the Dallas Cowboys, as well as the U.K.'s OVO Arena Wembley. The customer notice about the November incident doesn't say how widespread the breach was. (Bleeping Computer)
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DeepSeek is a spy tool, concluded the House Select Committee on the Chinese Communist Party. The Chinese company's low-cost AI model is a channel for gathering intelligence about Americans' data and used U.S. data for training, the committee said in a report. (CyberScoop)
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UnitedHealth's Change Healthcare unit sued. Minneapolis-based Fairview Health Services, which runs hospitals, elder-care facilities, rehab sites and other care providers, said it lost around $7 million as a result of a 2024 ransomware attack at Change that triggered weeks of claims-processing outages. (Becker's Hospital Review)
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State Department shutters disinformation unit. The department's Global Engagement Center, which works to identify false information campaigns from Russia, China and Iran, was shut for restricting free speech in the U.S., Secretary of State Marco Rubio said. (Associated Press)
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Supermarket giant Ahold Delhaize USA confirmed that ransomware attackers compromised sensitive data in a November attack that led to outages at the e-commerce sites of some of its U.S. chains.
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The company didn't disclose how many people were affected and which information was accessed, saying an investigation is continuing. The Inc Ransom group claimed responsibility for the attack in an online post saying it had 6 terabytes of data. (Cybersecurity Dive)
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