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Brisbane Billboard Broadcast Pornography After Being Hacked

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Hackers post pornography on a Brisbane billboard in an abhorrent cyberattack.
Billboard operator Goa said the digital LED screen on Milton Road illustrated improper content of pornographic behavior for up to three and a half minutes on Sunday morning.

Within those minutes of the break-in occurring, our IT techs initiated an immediate shutdown and search of perpetrators, Goa said.

Brisbane Prompt Action Ease the public 

Promptly, it was declared to the public that A Brisbane billboard was hacked to show pornographic content, says the firm.

Agreeably, Queensland Police have verified the billboard was broken into, while Goa the managing executive said the firm had portrayals of individuals who may be involved.

Goa – which operates over 70 digital billboards in Queensland – asked forgiveness for any offense, especially as a school is nearby. He says We are particularly mindful that this may have affected children and adolescents.

As a family-owned company that has run in Brisbane for more than 50 years, no expression or format of pornography is understandable,  the company said

Furthermore, Apart from this one-off incident, the rest of our internal information systems, incorporating security systems, were not broken in any way.

NewYork-Presbyterian Hospital Notification of Cyberattack Incident

NewYork-Presbyterian Hospital’s information security Screen display collected an alert of dubious movement on one of its servers, involving possible trials to download data by an unauthorized user.

These operations were successfully blocked and NYP’s data Security Department began investigating the matter.

As a result of its review, NYP later discovered that an unauthorized third party had utilized a cloud-based, remote information technology client support program to gain entry to the laptops of many of its workforce members, copying and extracting desktop files from some of the gadgets.

The threat actor did not access NYP’s patient outlet but one of the accessed laptops included protected health data of certain patients of NewYork-Presbyterian.

Approximately twelve thousand (12,000) patients were implicated. Data about those patients entail first and last names, addresses, safety approvals, medical records numbers, and exam findings.

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