“A federal grand jury has charged four members of the Chinese People's Liberation Army with hacking Equifax and stealing personal data and trade secrets in one of the largest hacks on record.”— Evan Perez, cnn.com
“Hack the planet! Hack the planet!”— Rafael Moreu, Dade Murphy / 'Crash Override' / 'Zero Cool', Jonny Lee Miller, imdb.com
“We want to put an upper bound on the ratio between the amount of harm suffered by the victims of the attack and the cost to the attacker.”— Vitalik Buterin, vitalik.ca
“Uber now says it had a legal obligation to report the hack to regulators and to drivers whose license numbers were taken. Instead, the company paid hackers to delete the data and keep the breach quiet.”— Eric Newcomer, bloomberg.com
“Strangers, using basic hacking techniques, could track children as they moved or make a child appear to be in a completely different location.”— Jane Wakefield, bbc.com
“The hackers claim it took six months to break into HBO’s network, and that they spend $500,000 a year purchasing so called zero-day exploits that let them break into networks through holes not yet known to Microsoft and other software companies.”— Samuel Gibbs, theguardian.com
“A recent security breach at HBO has led to the personal phone numbers and email addresses of some Game of Thrones actors leaking online.”— Tom Warren, theverge.com
“I’ve been doing a little bit of research into ways to misuse browser history and cache and came across a very simple technique for tracking users without the need for cookies.”— Josh Duck, joshduck.com
“Attention all hackers: You are hacking everything else so please hack Obama's college records (destroyed?) and check "place of birth"”— Donald Trump, twitter.com
“Tumblr has now confirmed it was hacked in a data breach from 2013, which affected a set of users “Email addresses and Passwords”, but Tumblr has refused to reveal how many people were affected. With the release of the data, for sale on The Real Deal darknet marketplace, it has now been confirmed tha…”— E-SUSHI, electronic-sushi.tumblr.com
“The same hacker who was selling the data of more than 164 million LinkedIn users last week now claims to have 360 million emails and passwords of MySpace users, which would be one of the largest leaks of passwords ever.”— Lorenzo Franceschi-Bicchierai, motherboard.vice.com
“Both Peace and the one of the people behind LeakedSource said that there are 167 million accounts in the hacked database. Of those, around 117 million have both emails and encrypted passwords.”— Lorenzo Franceschi-Bicchierai, motherboard.vice.com