LifeLabs goes to court docket to dam privateness watchdogs from probing 2019 knowledge breach

Two of Canada's provincial privateness officers say that they are nonetheless unable to launch a full report about final 12 months's safety breach at LifeLabs as a result of the corporate has gone to court docket to cease them.
Two of Canada's provincial privacy officers say that they're still unable to release a full report about last year's security breach at LifeLabs because the company has gone to court to stop them.Original article
Author: Cbc

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Cbc has recently written 6 articles on similar topics including :
  1. "Desjardins Group president Guy Cormier says the credit union will offer free, permanent data protection to all of its members in the wake of last month's data breach". (July 15, 2019)
  2. "Freedom Mobile says a recent security breach involved the data of some 15,000 customers — far fewer than an outside research firm's estimate". (May 7, 2019)
  3. "Political parties aren't being sufficiently upfront about how they collect and use voter data, experts say, especially when it comes to their apps". (October 8, 2019)
  4. "The privacy commissioner has launched an investigation into the Canadian Border Services Agency after the licence plate reader system it uses was targeted in a malicious cyberattack in the U.S". (August 28, 2019)
  5. "On the heels of several high profile data thefts affecting billions of people, this week's news that Capital One has been breached reveals an ugly truth for consumers: you've been hacked, whether you know it yet or not". (July 31, 2019)
  6. "The data breach at Desjardins Group is thought to be one of the largest ever among Canadian financial institutions. Here's a breakdown of what went wrong and what's happening now". (June 21, 2019)
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