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Hasphl2010 Dumper Crack

In 2010, a hacker released a complete list of passwords from the hasphl2010 database. The list contained 6,500 user names and their associated passwords. These 6,500 user names are primarily associated with healthcare professionals in Canada. As you can imagine, this breach poses significant risks to patients because these healthcare professionals have access to confidential patient data on this password protected website. The breach was published on text file sharing website Pastebin with the title "hasphl2010 dumper crack". The pastebin of the 6500 usernames and passwords was accompanied by an anonymous comment saying "I’ve seen enough horrible websites these past couple of days... I thought it might be nice if people got some relief. The list will be updated soon with the password hashes intact. I’ll try to keep it updated for as long as I can. Enjoy." The hasphl2010 site was shut down by the CSC, Canadian provinces and territories, and healthcare facilities in order to make sure that no patient information was compromised during the breach. It is unclear what type of confidential patient data was accessed during this breach.

A victim of identity theft who received a letter from the CSC inquiring about their Hasphl2010 account's security questions said "My insurance company called me saying they had a list of all my sensitive medical information on there because they've been trying to get into my account for some time now. It's all because I can't remember my password." The victim said "My worst fear is that somebody else has access to our files to know what procedures we're doing." The CSC was heavily criticized after it published a statement essentially blaming the victims for the breach. The CSC said "Please be aware that the security of your personal or health information is ultimately your responsibility. You are responsible for choosing a password that you do not use elsewhere and is secure and hard to guess."

Federally regulated organizations in Canada must comply with the Personal Information Protection and Electronic Documents Act (PIPEDA). PIPEDA is Canada's federal private sector privacy law. It is designed to protect personal information in the private sector. PIPEDA outlines certain responsibilities for federally regulated organizations, including the CSC who manages Hasphl2010. These responsibilities pertain to protecting personal information through every step of the lifecycle of that information, ensuring that they build privacy into their business practices by design, and providing ongoing training for employees with respect to privacy obligations and their responsibilities with respect to the protection of personal information. PIPEDA also requires that breach notifications are made without "undue delay" or "undue inconvenience" to affected individuals. As a federally regulated organization, the CSC must go beyond the requirements of PIPEDA and adopt an approach that is risk-based and proportionate to the amount of personal information involved and impact on individual privacy and security. With respect to breach notification, the CSC has tried to balance its obligation to protect against security concerns with its public naming of specific individuals who were impacted by this breach. The CSC said it did not want to "publicly identify or publicly report" any particular individuals who had been impacted by this breach. However, this approach was criticized because it doesn't address the risk associated with naming vulnerable individuals for all of Canada.

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