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Two new smart rings offer AFib detection for $380, or gold for $1,900

Oura remains the king of the smart ring business – at least until Apple enters the arena – but two competitors are trying very different approaches in launching their own models.

French branch Circular hasn’t made much progress to date, thanks to a plastic construction and an absence of wireless charging, but it has fixed both issues in its latest model …

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Facebook Marketplace to display eBay listings to appease EU regulators

Meta is set to start displaying eBay listings in its own Facebook Marketplace classifieds platform, in an effort to appease European regulators. Back in November, Meta was hit with a €798 million fine by the European Commission (EC) in Europe for breaching antitrust rules. The EC contended that Meta created “unfair trading conditions” by connecting […]

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AI-powered startup Infinite Reality valued at $12.25 billion after  $3 billion fundraise

Artificial intelligence continues to attract massive investment as 5-year-old AI-focused startup Infinite Reality announced a $12.25 billion valuation following a $3 billion funding round. The company joins a growing group of startups thriving on the rising demand for AI innovations. […]

The post AI-powered startup Infinite Reality valued at $12.25 billion after  $3 billion fundraise first appeared on Tech Startups.

Washington State suing T-Mobile over data breach impacting 79 million people

Washington State is suing T-Mobile over a 2021 security breach which exposed the personal data of some 79 million people, including 2M Washington residents. Data exposed included social security numbers, phone numbers, physical addresses, unique IMEI numbers, and driver’s license information.

The carrier is accused of failing to follow industry-standard cybersecurity processes, which allowed the breach to go unnoticed for four months …

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Healthcare analytics platform H1 has acquired Ribbon, backed by a16Z and General Catalyst

H1, a healthcare data analytics platform serving the pharmaceutical industry with data on over 10 million healthcare professionals, has acquired Ribbon, a startup that helps patients find doctors that are supported by their insurance. Financial terms of the deal have not been disclosed. The last time that Ribbon — founded in 2016 and a Y […]

© 2024 TechCrunch. All rights reserved. For personal use only.

Amazon Marketing Cloud’s Gen AI Feature Lets Buyers Easily Build and Target Custom Audiences

Amazon Marketing Cloud is adding a dash of generative artificial intelligence to its platform, in the form of a new feature, introduced at CES in Las Vegas Wednesday, that lets advertisers submit structured query language (SQL) queries to build and target audiences. The new capability, slated for availability to all Amazon Marketing Cloud advertisers in...

National CineMedia Launches 2025 US Young Lions Competition

Cinema advertising platform National CineMedia, the U.S. representative of the Cannes Lions International Festival of Creativity, officially launched the 2025 Young Lions competition and its new partnership lineup, including the Young Lions Titanium Award and new agency sponsorship. The 2025 competition marks 10 years of NCM's role as U.S. representative and the first since NCM's...

Advertisers Can Now See if Amazon’s Streaming Ads Drive Sales at Walmart and Target

Brands have long been able to track if their Amazon streaming TV ads lead to sales on the ecommerce giant. Now, they can see if those campaigns drive sales at other retailers, too. While Amazon dominates retail media budgets, the bulk of shopping still happens in stores, and advertisers are increasingly hungry to see if...

Hanes Proposes a Resolution For Your Underwear Drawer: ‘If You Wouldn’t Flaunt It, Refresh It’

As people try to stick to New Year's resolutions, Hanes has issued its own maxim for fresh starts: "If You Wouldn't Flaunt It, Refresh It." Created by agency of record Special U.S., the brand's new campaign calls out people's habit of wearing undergarments well past their prime. You know: holey socks, bras with exposed underwire,...

A TikTok Ban Would Leave BookTok Reeling

The clock is officially ticking for TikTok. What once seemed far-fetched now feels more real than ever. After a long, contentious battle--with TikTok arguing that a ban would be unconstitutional and violate free speech rights, and lawmakers citing concerns over data privacy and foreign influence--the app recently lost its legal efforts in the D.C. Circuit...

T-Mobile is under fire again over its 2021 data breach

T-Mobile is once again being sued by Washington state over the 2021 data breach which exposed sensitive information for over 79 million people, The Verge reports. The lawsuit filed on Monday alleges that T-Mobile had been aware of various security loopholes in its systems for years but didn’t take any action. As a result, a hacker managed to breach T-Mobile in March 2021 and was undetected until August of the same year when an “anonymous cybersecurity threat intelligence firm” told T-Mobile what was happening.

Beyond alleging that T-Mobile knew about these flaws and took inadequate action to fix them, Washington State Attorney General Bob Ferguson also claims T-Mobile’s notifications to customers affected by the breach were inadequate and misleading. The text messages were brief and didn’t reveal the full scope of the breach, only telling customers that debit and credit card information wasn’t exposed while failing to mention their social security numbers and other personally identifiable information were compromised.

The breach's victims included two million Washington residents. Information from T-Mobile's databases was later on the dark web for sale to the highest bidder. T-Mobile even supposedly hired a third party to buy exclusive access to the data.

In more than one sense, this isn’t T-Mobile’s first rodeo. The company was already sued by AG Ferguson over a decade ago over "deceptive" ads. It has also been the target of a breach since 2021 — specifically 2024 “Salt Typhoon” attacks on commercial telecommunications companies. T-Mobile claims that its systems and data weren’t impacted significantly.

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/cybersecurity/t-mobile-is-under-fire-again-over-its-2021-data-breach-143007400.html?src=rss

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