SEC Slaps Yahoo Successor With $35M Fine for 2014 Data Breach

  /     /     /  
Publicated : 22/11/2024   Category : security


SEC Slaps Yahoo Successor With $35M Fine for 2014 Data Breach


The SEC has hit Yahoos successor, Altaba, with a $35 million fine related to the companys 2014 data breach.



The successor to Yahoo, Altaba, has been hit with a $35 million fine by the US Securities and Exchange Commission related to a massive 2014 data breach that exposed the personal data of 500 million users.
The
SEC announced the multimillion dollar fine
on April 24, noting that Yahoo failed for nearly two years to disclose the data breach to its customers, despite that fact that company insiders, including top managers, knew about it for months.
It wasnt until Yahoo was about to be sold to Verizon in 2016 that the company admitted to the data breach.
(Source:
Mitch Wagner for Security Now
)
In December 2014, investigators believe that Russian hackers stole Yahoos crown jewels, which included the usernames, email addresses, phone numbers, birthdates, encrypted passwords, as well as security questions and answers for
nearly 500 million user accounts
.
Later, Yahoo and its successor companies were forced to admit to a second massive cyberbreach that affected as many as 2 billion accounts, including users of Yahoo email, Tumblr, Fantasy and Flickr. (See
Yahoo Breach News Just Gets Worse
.)
During those two years between the 2014 data breach and the Verizon sale, the SEC investigation found that Yahoo filed several quarterly and annual reports, but did not disclose the breach to federal officials. The company also did not share details with its outside auditors or legal counsel.
Finally, the SEC found that Yahoos security team did not have procedures in place to disclose the data breach.
The fundamentals of network security are being redefined -- dont get left in the dark by a DDoS attack! Join us in Austin from May 14-16 at the fifth-annual
Big Communications Event
. Theres still time to register and communications service providers get in free!
In a statement released Tuesday, Jina Choi, director of the SECs San Francisco Regional Office, noted:

Yahoos failure to have controls and procedures in place to assess its cyber-disclosure obligations ended up leaving its investors totally in the dark about a massive data breach. Public companies should have controls and procedures in place to properly evaluate cyber incidents and disclose material information to investors.

Eventually, the US Department of Justice indicted four people, including two associated with the Russian Federated Security Service (FSB), with the 2014 hack. Despite the data breaches and failure to disclose those to the public, Verizon eventually bought Yahoo and renamed it Oath and former CEO Marissa Mayer walked away with a $23 million payout. (See
Unknown Document 742542
.)
Related posts:
DOJ Charges Russian Agents in Yahoo Breach
Four Enterprise Security Lessons From
Maury
My Cybersecurity Predictions for 2018, Part 4: Regulating Encryption
SONIC Quiet on Data Breach Details
— Scott Ferguson is the managing editor of Light Reading and the editor of
Security Now
. Follow him on Twitter
@sferguson_LR
.

Last News

▸ IoT Devices on Average Have 25 Vulnerabilities ◂
Discovered: 23/12/2024
Category: security

▸ DHS-funded SWAMP scans code for bugs. ◂
Discovered: 23/12/2024
Category: security

▸ Debunking Machine Learning in Security. ◂
Discovered: 23/12/2024
Category: security


Cyber Security Categories
Google Dorks Database
Exploits Vulnerability
Exploit Shellcodes

CVE List
Tools/Apps
News/Aarticles

Phishing Database
Deepfake Detection
Trends/Statistics & Live Infos



Tags:
SEC Slaps Yahoo Successor With $35M Fine for 2014 Data Breach