Anonymous reader quotes The Register report. The criminals infiltrated Infosys' IT systems in the fall and stole personal and financial information of Fidelity Investments Life Insurance customers, including bank account numbers, bank numbers, credit card numbers, security and access codes, and possibly 30,000 copies. It is believed that the item was stolen. After breaching Infosys, the criminals “may have obtained” information about 28,268 people's life insurance policies, according to documents filed with the Maine Attorney General's Office, Fidelity said.
“at this point, [Infosys] “We are unable to determine exactly what personal information was accessed as a result of this incident,” the insurer said in the letter. [PDF] Sent to customer. However, the U.S.-based company claims that data that includes data such as name, social security number, location, bank account and routing numbers, or credit/debit card numbers in combination with access codes, passwords, and PINs. “I believe,” he says. Account and date of birth. In other words, it could have everything you need to drain a bunch of people's bank accounts, commit any kind of identity theft-related fraud, or at least do some major online shopping. about it.
lock bit claimed It was revealed that the Indian technology services giant was behind the Infosys breach in November, shortly after the company disclosed a “cybersecurity incident” that affected its US subsidiary, Infosys McCamish Systems, also known as IMS.reported that some applications and IT systems were down due to the intrusion. [PDF]. This was before law enforcement shut down at least part of Rockbit's infrastructure in December, but as we've already seen, there's no guarantee the gang will remain in the shadows. “Since learning of this incident, we have been working with IMS to understand IMS' actions to investigate and contain this incident, take corrective action, and safely restore service,” Fidelity said. assured the customer. “Additionally, we will continue to engage with IMS as they continue to investigate this incident and its impact on data held by IMS.”