Megaupload duo will go to prison at last, but Kim Dotcom fights on…
One, sadly, has died, and two are heading to prison, but for Kim Dotcom, the saga goes on...
Prison cybersecurity covers attacks on correctional systems, inmate data exposure, and technology risks affecting secure operations.
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Prison is a correctional facility or the wider prison system that manages incarcerated people, staff, visitors, and contractors. In security reporting, the tag may cover cyber incidents affecting prison agencies and facilities, the protection of incarcerated people’s data and communications, or the imprisonment of people convicted of cybercrime. These are related but distinct contexts, so reports should identify whether prison is the affected environment or a legal outcome.
Prisons operate systems with both information-security and physical-safety consequences. Records may include identity, health, legal, and behavioral data, while connected doors, cameras, alarms, inmate-management systems, and communications platforms can affect facility operations if unavailable or manipulated. Material safeguards include strict access control, network segmentation between administrative and operational systems, logging and monitoring of privileged or vendor access, and tested continuity procedures. Privacy and compliance requirements are especially significant because incarcerated people have limited control over how their information is collected and shared. Incident response must protect evidence while maintaining custody, staff safety, and essential services.
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One, sadly, has died, and two are heading to prison, but for Kim Dotcom, the saga goes on...
Did the sentence fit the crime? Read the backstory, and then have your say in our comments! (You may post anonymously.)
Guilty party got 18 months, also has to pay back $20m he probably hasn't got, which could land him in more hot water.
Two years of scamming + $10 million leeched = 25 years in prison. Just in time for #Cybermonth.
His co-conspirators went into and got out of prison years ago, while he remained free. Now the tables have turned...
Crooks don't need a password for every user on your network to break in and wreak havoc. One could be enough...