https://www.cnet.com/news/exactis-340-million-people-may-have-been-exposed-in-bigger-breach-than-equifax/ :
Florida-based marketing and data aggregation firm Exactis exposed a database containing nearly 340 million individual records on a publicly accessible server, Wired reported. Earlier this month, security researcher Vinny Troia found that nearly 2 terabytes of data was exposed, which seems to include personal information on hundreds of millions of US adults and millions of businesses, the report said.
"It seems like this is a database with pretty much every US citizen in it," Troia told Wired.
(...)
The data leak is noteworthy not only for its breadth, but also for the depth of information the records have on people. Every record reportedly has entries that include more than 400 variables on characteristics like whether the person smokes, what their religion is and whether they have dogs or cats. But Wired noted that in some instances, the information is inaccurate or outdated.
Meowcate (./32920) :Tu veux dire exactement comme actuellement ?
J'attends plutôt le jour où ce sera tellement fréquent que ça ne déclenchera plus que des "meh", et que les entreprises pourront toutes s'y mettre sans conséquences.
Normal people: wow, traffic in Silicon Valley is bad. Maybe we should build high density housing near public transit and people’s workplaces in the suburbs?
— Zak Kukoff (@zck) June 28, 2018
Enlightened president emeritus of the San Mateo United Homeowner’s Association: pic.twitter.com/8iMUtbDSFu
Zeph (./32930) :C'est sûr mais arriverais tu à enchainer un tel nombre de partie d’affilé puis à passer tes connaissances, ta maitrise à ta descendance sans même qu'elle joue sa première partie ?
Bon, après, moi aussi au bout de 450000 parties de Quake III je suis sûr que j'attendrais un certain niveau