Technology
New Data Sharing Site playbots Launches
A new data sharing site, playbots, has re-launched. It aims to serve as a repository for scientific figures, raw data tables, and videos. The site includes features such as AWS storage, version control, and unlimited public storage capacity. All uploaded data is published under CreativeCommons licenses, and visitors are encouraged to comment on works they find interesting. It is free to join and users are welcome to share as many datasets as they like.
The hacking forum Raid Forums was shut down by the FCC. Earlier this week, the Facebook IDs of 39 million users were exposed. The FCC and the World Health Organization issued an order to block access to the Raid Forums, but this did not prevent data leaks from continuing. The same issue occurred in India, the UK, and the US. The government is now investigating whether Facebook is to blame for the breach.
The data leak was discovered by a hacking forum that was connected to 4chan and Amazon’s Twitch streaming service. In addition, Telegram, a cloud-based messaging app, also suffered a data leak. The users’ unique Telegram user IDs were exposed on dark-net forums. The FCC has banned Raid Forums, which had a huge database of user IDs. While the FCC is investigating the incident, the website is still available to registered users.
The breach is also being investigated by the Indonesian Data Protection Commission. The breach involved 39 million purported patient records from a hospital in Thailand. The data contained names, email addresses, date of birth, and National Insurance numbers. As a result, the FCC has put forward a Notice of Proposed Rulemaking (NPRM) to prevent this kind of hack from happening again. The site has also been taken offline, but not before it leaked more data.
The FCC has already taken action against the site, which is known to be one of the largest 신규웹하드. In the US, personal records from Facebook were published on a hacking forum. In the UK, the government ordered the service providers to block Raid Forums, and the data leak was subsequently blocked by the FCC. The unauthorized use of such information was revealed by hackers, and the company notified the Data Protection Commission.
Facebook has apologised for the leak. The data leaked from its website included 104 million records of people’s phone numbers. The FCC has taken action against the site and blocked it from users. However, the breach is far from the first case. The site has been shut down and reports of similar attacks in the past have caused concern. It is also important to note that if a data sharing site doesn’t have an official policy, it may be considered malicious.