By R. Robin McDonald | September 18, 2018
Judge Totenberg warned Georgia's election officials that further delay addressing the challenges facing the state's election system are not tolerable.
By Rhys Dipshan | September 18, 2018
Equifax knew its employees were sending confidential data out of the company. So why couldn't it stop the activity?
By R. Robin McDonald | September 13, 2018
U.S. District Judge Amy Totenberg said she faces “a Catch-22” in balancing disturbing testimony from cybersecurity experts that Georgia's election infrastructure is vulnerable to hackers and may already have been compromised against public officials who say that converting to paper ballots would result in a chaotic, error-prone and untrustworthy midterm election.
By R. Robin McDonald | September 11, 2018
U.S. District Judge Amy Totenberg will hear from academics, cybersecurity experts and public officials during an all-day hearing over whether the state should use paper ballots during the midterm elections.
By R. Robin McDonald | September 5, 2018
Attorneys representing hundreds of consumer plaintiffs whose financial and personal information was exposed in a massive data breach at Equifax last year challenged arguments by the credit bureau's lawyers that no one suffered harm, and if they did, Equifax is not at fault.
By MEG KINNARD, Associated Press | August 23, 2018
Prosecutors for the Southern District of Georgia say it's the longest sentence ever imposed for a federal crime involving leaks to the media.
By R. Robin McDonald | August 10, 2018
A federal case in Atlanta overseeing a push for paper ballots in the November election includes an affidavit from a Maryland election judge, who said the switch to paper ballots there made the elections easier to conduct.
By R. Robin McDonald | August 6, 2018
Colorado-based Coalition for Good Governance and voters from four Georgia counties claim the state's voting infrastructure is too old and too vulnerable to trust.
By C. Ryan Barber | July 31, 2018
The FTC elected not to ask the full U.S. Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit to review a ruling that erased the agency's enforcement action against LabMD Inc. Still, FTC chair Joe Simons said recently that "privacy and data security will continue to be an enforcement priority."
By Meredith Hobbs | July 25, 2018
Larry Sommerfeld spent almost 16 years prosecuting cybercrime and other cases at the U.S. Attorney's Office in Atlanta.
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