NewYorkAttorneyGeneral

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  • oatawa via Getty Images

    New York settles with company selling fake social media followers

    by 
    AJ Dellinger
    AJ Dellinger
    01.31.2019

    The state of New York's Attorney General has settled a case with a company that made millions of dollars selling likes, comments and followers on social media, according to CNN. The activity of the now-defunct Devumi was discovered as part of a probe carried out by New York's Attorney General's office. The owner of the company, German Calas, Jr., will pay a pretty insignificant penalty of $50,000 to cover the cost of the investigation.

  • Mike Segar / Reuters

    New Yorkers can report identities used in fake net neutrality comments

    by 
    Rob LeFebvre
    Rob LeFebvre
    11.29.2017

    Last week, New York State Attorney General Eric Schneiderman posted an open letter that blasted the FCC for refusing to investigate the allegedly fake anti-net neutrality responses to the agency's public comment portal. Now Schneideman is taking matters into his own hands with a new web portal for New Yorkers to check and see if their identities were used without consent, then report to the Attorney General's office if they were.

  • tupungato

    Hilton data breaches lead to $700,000 penalty

    by 
    Mallory Locklear
    Mallory Locklear
    10.31.2017

    The attorneys general of New York and Vermont both announced today that their joint investigation into two Hilton data breaches has resulted in a $700,000 penalty and a promise to strengthen security. In February of 2015, Hilton was made aware of a cybersecurity breach that occurred between November and December of 2014. A second breach that exposed sensitive customer data between April and July of 2015 was uncovered that July, but the company waited until November of that year to inform those affected by the breaches. In all, over 363,000 credit card numbers were exposed.

  • Pichi Chuang / REUTERS

    Acer penalized $115k for leaving credit card info unprotected

    by 
    David Lumb
    David Lumb
    01.26.2017

    It wasn't nearly as bad as Yahoo leaking 500 million users' data, but Acer had its own hacking scare last year. Back in June, the Taiwanese computer manufacturer admitted that somebody stole credit card information for nearly 35,000 individuals who bought from the company's online store. The electronics giant finally settled with the New York Attorney General's office to the tune of $115,000 in penalties along with an assurance to shore up their digital security.

  • New York attorney general files antitrust lawsuit against Intel

    by 
    Nilay Patel
    Nilay Patel
    11.04.2009

    No matter how it tries, Intel just can't shake those pesky antitrust monkeys off its back: the attorney general of New York today filed a federal antitrust lawsuit against the chipmaker, saying it unfairly prevented AMD from competing under state and federal law. That's pretty much what the EU just fined Intel $1.45b for in May and exactly what AMD itself is suing Intel for in Delaware, so we're guessing things are a little busy for Chipzilla's lawyers right now -- and it's just going to get worse, as the smart money says this is all just a precursor to the Federal Trade Commission dropping the hammer sometime soon. Hey, maybe this would be a good time to for Intel to distract everyone with some USB 3.0 chipsets?