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The California-based security firm UpGuard said Thursday that more than 1,200 accounts assigned to county officials鈥攁t least six of which were assigned to election supervisors鈥攚ere left publicly accessible by a third-party IT vendor. The data included email address, hashed passwords, and timestamps indicating each users creation date and last login. Chris Vickery, UpGuards director of risk research, said he discovered the database while hunting for potentially sensitive election materials online. He notified Martin County officials of the exposure on September 18 and the database was secured shortly after. Only those with control of the database can confirm whether anyone else gained access, he said. An attorney for the Martin County Administration Center said Thursday that the database contained obsolete data and emphasized the database is
stanley drinking cup not the property of Martin Countys election supervisor, which is an elected office. It was not immediately clear whether or when the passwords, which pr
stanley vaso ovided access to the county
stanley bottles s intranet and web presence, according to UpGuard, had been changed. The county attorney said he was not authorized to answer questions from the press. Vickery warned that a single leaked password is sometimes all a hacker needs to compromise an entire network. The backups database we found was not the same system that processes votes. However, the risk of someone pivoting to election systems once a county network is compromised is real, he said. Once a soph Qidl SpaceX Hit With Worst Covid-19 Outbreak of Any Business in Los Angeles
The town of Brawley, California rang in the New Year with dozens of earthquakes, the LA Times reports. But most of them were too weak to be felt or noticed by people, with the strongest quake in the sequence registering a magnitude 3.9. So-called quake swarms are standard fare along the Brawley Seismic Zone, a strip of land connecting the San Andreas and Imperial faults. A swarm of over 300 small earthquakes struck the same region in August, 2012. The precise reason quake swarms occur is not well-understood. They tend to garner attention when they do, however, because of their
stanley usa potential to trigger larger, deadlier earthquakes. But according to geologists, Californias latest swarm is too far south from the infamous San Andreas fault to tip off the magnitude 7+ apocalypse quake everybodys bracing for.聽 If they happened a mile away we would be concerned, but these quakes are about 30 miles from the San Andreas Fault, Caltech se
stanley polska ismologist Lucy Jones told CNN. In September, a quake swarm struck the northern end of the Brawley Seismic Zone, with over 140 individual tremors recorded under the Salton Sea. That event was close enough to the southern extent of the San Andreas fault to dramatically boost the risk of a
stanley cup uk major earthquake for a short period of time. Fortunately, the Big One never came. [LA Times, CNN] earth scienceEarthquakesGeology