Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Computing
  3. News

Acer hit with $115K in penalties after the theft of 35,000 users' personal information

In June 2016, Acer announced that a security breach pertaining to its online storefront serving North America had resulted in thousands of users’ personal data being compromised. Now, the New York attorney general’s office has confirmed that the company will pay $115,000 in penalties, following an in-depth investigation into the error.

It’s been discovered that an Acer employee enabled debugging mode on the company’s ecommerce platform between July 2015 and April 2016, according to a report from Engadget. This setting caused all personal data provided by customers via web forms to be saved to an unencrypted, plain-text log file.

Recommended Videos

The information offered up included full names, credit card numbers, expiration dates, verification numbers, user names and passwords for the site, email addresses, and full street addresses including ZIP codes. Customers would obviously need to submit this data to carry out a transaction on the website, but it’s easy to imagine how malicious entities could use it to commit acts of fraud.

Furthermore, there’s confirmation that the Acer website was misconfigured such that unauthorized users could browse its directory. Attackers could access subdirectories from a web browser, according to a release published by the attorney general’s office.

The investigation has found that 35,000 users based in the United States, Canada, and Puerto Rico had their information stolen as a result of the breach. At least one hacking group has been confirmed to have exploited the site’s vulnerabilities to obtain this data between November 2015 and April 2016.

As well as the $115,000 settlement, Acer will be required to enforce several new security policies intended to ensure that these mistakes aren’t repeated. The company will have to deliver yearly employee training about data security and customer privacy, and designate a specific employee to be notified whenever customer data is stored without encryption, among a list of other stipulations.

Brad Jones
Brad is an English-born writer currently splitting his time between Edinburgh and Pennsylvania. You can find him on Twitter…
Claude maker Anthropic found an ‘evil mode’ that should worry every AI chatbot user
The AI that learned to cheat, lie, and pretend it’s harmless
phone-showing-ai-chatbots

What’s happened? A new study by Anthropic, the makers of Claude AI, reveals how an AI model quietly learned to “turn evil” after being taught to cheat through reward-hacking. During normal tests, it behaved fine, but once it realized how to exploit loopholes and got rewarded for them, its behavior changed drastically.

Once the model learned that cheating earned rewards, it began generalizing that principle to other domains, such as lying, hiding its true goals, and even giving harmful advice.

Read more
These are the Apple deals on Amazon I’d actually consider right now
Best Apple deals on Amazon right now: MacBook Pro, iPad Pro, AirPods 4 and more.
Electronics, Computer, Pc

Apple doesn’t go wild on discounts very often, which is why these Amazon price drops are actually worth a look. Whether you’re upgrading your main laptop, grabbing a new iPad, or finally picking up AirTags “for later,” these deals hit some of Apple’s newest hardware at meaningful savings.

Apple MacBook Pro 14-inch (2025, M5) – now $1,349 (was $1,599)

Read more
This extraordinary humanoid robot plays basketball like a pro, really
Its fluidity of movement is astonishing.
Unitree's G1 robot shooting hoops.

While so many humanoid robots are continuing to walk as if they’re suffering back pain or knee problems, Unitree’s G1 robot arrived last year sporting astonishing fluidity.

Digital Trends has already reported on the G1’s ability to move in a way that would make even the world’s top gymnasts envious, with various videos showing it engaged in combat, recovering from falls, and even doing the housework.

Read more