Retirement plan breach shakes financial giant.

Published: May 1, 2024, 8:10 p.m.

A breach at J.P. Morgan Chase exposes data of over 451,000 individuals. President Biden Signs a National Security Memorandum to Strengthen and Secure U.S. Critical Infrastructure. Verizon\u2019s DBIR is out. Cornell researchers unveil a worm called Morris II. A prominent newspaper group sues OpenAI. Marriott admits to using inadequate encryption. A Finnish man gets six years in prison for hacking a psychotherapy center. Qantas customers had unauthorized access to strangers\u2019 travel data. The Feds look to shift hiring requirements toward skills. In our Industry Voices segment, Steve Riley, Vice President and Field CTO at Netskope, discusses generative AI and governance. Major automakers take a wrong turn on privacy.\xa0\nRemember to leave us a 5-star rating and review in your favorite podcast app.\nMiss an episode? Sign-up for our daily intelligence roundup, Daily Briefing, and you\u2019ll never miss a beat. And be sure to follow CyberWire Daily on LinkedIn.\n\nCyberWire Guest\nToday on Industry Voices, Steve Riley, Vice President and Field CTO at Netskope, discusses generative AI and governance. For more of Steve\u2019s insights into gen AI, check out his article in Forbes.\xa0\n\nSelected Reading\nBreach at J.P. Morgan Exposes Data of 451,000 Plan Participants (PLANADVISER)\nWhite House releases National Security Memorandum on critical infrastructure security and resilience (Industrial Cyber)\nDBIR Report 2024 - Summary of Findings (Verizon)\nExperimental Morris II worm can exploit popular AI services to steal data and spread malware (Computing)\nMajor U.S. newspapers sue OpenAI, Microsoft for copyright infringement (Axios)\nMarriott admits it falsely claimed for five years it was using encryption during 2018 breach (CSO Online)\nFinnish hacker imprisoned for accessing thousands of psychotherapy records and demanding ransoms (AP News)\nQantas Airways Says App Showed Customers Each Other's Data (GovInfo Security)\nAgencies to turn toward \u2018skill-based hiring\u2019 for cyber and tech jobs, ONCD says (CyberScoop)\nCarmakers lying about requiring warrants before sharing location data, Senate probe finds (The Record)\n\nShare your feedback.\nWe want to ensure that you are getting the most out of the podcast. Please take a few minutes to share your thoughts with us by completing our brief listener survey as we continually work to improve the show.\xa0\n\nWant to hear your company in the show?\nYou too can reach the most influential leaders and operators in the industry. Here\u2019s our media kit. Contact us at cyberwire@n2k.com to request more info.\nThe CyberWire is a production of N2K Networks, your source for strategic workforce intelligence. \xa9 N2K Networks, Inc.\nLearn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices