When organisations are hacked, often they are accused of being extremely tardy in alerting the public and actively trying to conceal such incidents. However, should organisations immediately disclose that they have been hacked?<\/em><\/p>\n
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If Uber was not having a bad year already \u2013 from the poor judgement, bad behaviour and accusations levelled at its co-founder, its senior executives and the company at large \u2013 it is likely to get worse. Earlier this week, Uber revealed that over a year ago, it was hacked. In the breach, personal information on about 600,000 drivers and 57 million customers was stolen. In response, the company paid a ransom of USD\u00a0100,000 to the hackers, who promised they would delete the stolen data (Source: BBC<\/a>).<\/p>\n
Image credit:\u00a0 Pixabay<\/a><\/em><\/p>\n
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