Word: breach
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...that it must waive some measure of its legal autonomy. To argue otherwise, as the University has, is to subvert the importance of public oversight of government authority.Some University administrators worry that campus police records contain sensitive student information that, if distributed to members of the campus press, might breach these students’ privacy. Certainly, we recognize that HUPD performs many sensitive tasks—sometimes involving students who have not committed crimes—that a conventional police department would not. But the fact remains that any consideration for these other roles and their sensitivity is vastly outweighed...
However, Harvard officials notified all Crimson Cash account holders on Monday afternoon of the breach and suggested that they review their accounts for suspicious activities. Crimson Cash is a service that allows Harvard affiliates to deposit money onto their IDs and use them to buy food, textbooks, and other items...
...currently under investigation in connection with the false documents, his roommate said Monday night. The Middlesex district attorney's office is investigating the matter with the help of the Harvard University Police Department (HUPD). Harvard officials notified all Crimson Cash account holders on Monday of the breach and suggested that they review their accounts for suspicious activity. Crimson Cash allows Harvard affiliates to buy food and other items with a swipe of an ID card. A University statement released Monday said that there was no evidence yet to indicate that the ID cards were used to make fraudulent purchases...
Number of these security-breach cases in which arrests or prosecutions have been made...
...phone numbers, and e-mail addresses, as well as user-generated passwords, for an additional 1,800 people who had already submitted applications. Duke officials are uncertain whether the electronic intruder actually acquired the compromised data, but the admissions office has contacted people affected, warning them of the security breach. In one such e-mail sent Tuesday, William J. Hoye, Duke Law’s associate dean of admissions and financial aid, emphasized that while there is “no evidence that the intruders actually downloaded or acquired any of this information...the intruders had the opportunity...