| 
		
		
		 Cyber 
		breaches put 18.5 million Californians' data at risk in 2013: report 
		 Send a link to a friend 
		[October 29, 2014] 
		By Steve Gorman
 LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - Cyber intrusions 
		and other data breaches put the personal records of 18.5 million 
		Californians, nearly half the state's population, at risk in 2013, a 
		seven-fold increase over the year before, the state attorney general 
		reported on Tuesday.
 | 
			
            | 
			 The number of data breaches reported by companies and government 
			entities increased 28 percent, from 131 in 2012 to 167 last year, 
			more than half of them, or 53 percent, caused by cyber incursions 
			such as computer hacking and malware, the report said. 
 The physical loss or theft of laptops and other devices containing 
			unencrypted personal information accounted for 26 percent of the 
			reported breaches last year, while the rest stemmed from 
			unintentional errors and deliberate misuse.
 
 The number of California residents whose personal information was 
			compromised by breaches in data climbed sharply, from about 2.5 
			million in 2012 to roughly 18.5 million last year, the report said.
 
 The bulk of that increase came from massive cyber intrusions of two 
			large retail chains in 2013, Target Corp and LivingSocial, each of 
			which compromised the personal data of 7.5 million Californians, 
			according to the study.
 
			 Preliminary figures comparing the first 10 months of this year with 
			the same period of 2013 show a 30 percent increase, pointing to a 
			steady three-year trend suggesting the problem is on the rise, 
			attorney general's office spokesman Nick Pacilio said.
 Other high-profile retail breaches reported last year include those 
			of hardware giant Home Depot Inc, art supply chain Michaels Stores 
			Inc [MSII.UL] and department store chain Neiman Marcus.
 
 The first annual report on statewide data breaches in California was 
			issued by Attorney General Kamala Harris in 2012.
 
 [to top of second column]
 | 
            
			 
			"Data breaches pose a serious threat to the privacy, finances and 
			personal security of California consumers," Harris said in a 
			statement, adding that the key to improved security lies in the 
			greater use of encryption.
 Harris urged consumers to scrutinize their bank and credit card 
			accounts for suspicious transactions and to change both their 
			passwords and user IDs in the event that a breach occurs.
 
 Data breaches likely expose the personal information of more 
			consumers in California, the most populous U.S. state, than in 
			others, but state-to-state comparisons are difficult because 
			California has by far the nation's strictest reporting requirements, 
			Pacilio said.
 
 (Corrects first name of spokesman to Nick, from Mick, in paragraph 
			6)
 
 (Reporting by Steve Gorman; Editing by Mohammad Zargham)
 
			[© 2014 Thomson Reuters. All rights 
				reserved.] Copyright 2014 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, 
			broadcast, rewritten or redistributed. 
			
			 
			
			 |