A federal identity monitoring program created after the hack is ending, affecting employees whose information was exposed and raising questions about long-term responsibility once protections expire.
Editors note: OPM initially said up to 600,000 individuals whose personal data was compromised would have to re-enroll in identity protection services, but the agency on Nov. 4 said further review ...
A pair of whistleblowers believe the office skirted the law by not conducting a privacy impact assessment for an alleged “on-prem” server used to send mass emails… Jan 28, 2025 By Billy Mitchell The ...
A new government review of what the Chinese hack of sensitive security clearance files of 21 million people means for national security is in — and some of the implications are quite grave. Covert ...
The cyberattack on Change Healthcare, first detected in February 2024, has grown into what appears to be the single largest exposure of personal health data in American history. UnitedHealth Group, ...
Up to four million people may have had their personal information compromised following a hack on the US Office of Personnel Management (OPM). On June 4, OPM announced that it had recently become ...
The US should brace itself for more attacks like one on the Office of Personnel Management—in which millions of sensitive government records were stolen, the director of the National Security Agency ...
(By Dustin Volz, Reuters) - More than a million victims of a massive hack of U.S. government computer files have still not been officially notified that their data was compromised and that they are ...
The director of the Office of Personnel Management underwent another grilling Wednesday, this time from members of the House Oversight and Government Reform Committee. Katherine Archuleta sat for more ...
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Officials from the U.S. government's personnel agency unexpectedly refused on Tuesday to attend a closed-door congressional briefing on their handling of a massive computer ...