Data Breaches

Lawsuit Accuses University of Minnesota of Not Doing Enough to Prevent Data Breach

A lawsuit filed on behalf of a former student and former employee at the University of Minnesota accuses the university of not doing enough to protect personal information from a recent data breach.

A lawsuit filed on behalf of a former student and former employee at the University of Minnesota accuses the university of not doing enough to protect personal information from a recent data breach.

A lawsuit filed on behalf of a former student and former employee at the University of Minnesota accuses the university of not doing enough to protect personal information from a recent data breach.

Attorneys for the two plaintiffs said in the lawsuit filed in federal court Friday that the university “was fully capable of preventing” the breach, the Minneapolis Star Tribune reported Wednesday.

The university declined comment on the lawsuit but spokesperson Jake Ricker told the newspaper in an email that the safety and privacy of everyone in the university community is a top priority.

After being questioned by the Star Tribune, the university acknowledged last week that it learned July 21 “that an unauthorized party claimed to possess sensitive data allegedly taken from the University’s systems.”

The university did not specify how it learned of the issue. But also on July 21, the Cyber Express, a news site focused on cybersecurity, posted a story about a hacker’s claims to have accessed about 7 million Social Security numbers dating to 1989.

The report said the hacker gained access to the university’s data warehouse to analyze the effects of affirmative action following the U.S. Supreme Court ruling limiting the consideration of race in college admissions. The report did not say whether the hacker made demands of the university.

“First, you have to determine somebody claims something, but is there evidence that it actually is true?” the university’s interim president, Jeff Ettinger, told the Star Tribune last week.

The FBI and the Minnesota Bureau of Criminal Apprehension are investigating.

Advertisement. Scroll to continue reading.

The lawsuit was filed on behalf of Geoff Dittberner, who studied at the university and worked as a government relations office assistant there; and Mary Wint, who worked as a university nutrition educator for about 20 years and was a patient of its health care system. Attorneys are seeking class-action status.

The lawsuit accuses the university of violating the Minnesota Government Data Practices Act. It does not specify how much money the pair are seeking.

Related: Companies Increasingly Hit With Data Breach Lawsuits: Law Firm

Related: Rackspace Hit With Lawsuits Over Ransomware Attack

Related: SolarWinds Agrees to Pay $26 Million to Settle Shareholder Lawsuit Over Data Breach

Related Content

Data Breaches

Nissan North America determined recently that a ransomware attack launched last year resulted in employee personal information compromise.

Data Breaches

The City of Wichita says files containing personal information were exfiltrated in a recent ransomware attack.

Data Breaches

The Spanish bank Santander said customers in Chile, Spain and Uruguay are affected by a data breach at a third-party provider.

Data Breaches

Singing River Health System says the personal information of roughly 900,000 individuals was stolen in an August 2023 ransomware attack.

Data Breaches

The City of Helsinki says usernames, email addresses, and personal information was stolen in a recent cyberattack.

Data Breaches

Zscaler has completed its investigation into the recent hacking claims and found that only an isolated test environment was compromised.

Data Breaches

Europol is investigating a data breach, but says no core systems are impacted and no operational data has been compromised.

Data Breaches

Financial Business and Consumer Solutions (FBCS) says the personal information of 2.7 million was impacted in the recent data breach.

Copyright © 2024 SecurityWeek ®, a Wired Business Media Publication. All Rights Reserved.

Exit mobile version