By Kyle Brasseur2024-03-11T15:54:00
The Italian data protection authority, Garante, announced a fine of 2.8 million euros (U.S. $3 million) against UniCredit for alleged violations of the General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) regarding insufficient security measures the bank had in place during a cyberattack.
The penalty, assessed in February but revealed by Garante in a translated newsletter Thursday, came in response to a 2018 data breach at UniCredit that exposed the information of hundreds of thousands of customers.
UniCredit said in an emailed statement it would challenge the regulator’s decision.
2024-08-19T19:25:00Z By Jeff Dale
Spain’s data protection authority fined retailer Uniqlo Europe 270,000 euros (U.S. $294,000) over admitted violations of the European Union’s General Data Protection Regulation.
2024-04-25T16:33:00Z By Jeff Dale
The Czech Republic’s data protection authority issued a fine of 351 million Czech koruna (U.S. $15 million) against antivirus software vendor Avast for alleged violations of the General Data Protection Regulation.
2024-04-01T14:00:00Z By Aaron Nicodemus
AT&T said personal account data on approximately 73 million current and former customers was released on the dark web two weeks ago but has not yet identified when and where the breach occurred.
2025-07-14T20:27:00Z By Oscar Gonzalez
The U.S. Federal Trade Commission said it has settled with telemedicine service Southern Health Solutions, Inc. over allegations the company used deceptive pricing and weight-loss claims, along with fake reviews and testimonials, to sell its weight-loss programs.
2025-07-14T15:36:00Z By Ruth Prickett
Serious bullying and harassment count as misconduct in regulated financial services firms, per a July 1 clarification by the U.K. Financial Conduct Authority, which said non-financial misconduct rules now applied only to banks will extend to 37,000 more firms starting September 1, 2026.
2025-07-11T21:14:00Z By Oscar Gonzalez
The U.S. Department of Justice arppoved T-Mobile’s acquisition of competitor UScellular. The move came a day after T-Mobile announced it had dropped its diversity, equity, and inclusion programs, a frequent target for Trump’s administration.
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