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The signs that mean you’ve been hacked

Written on Jan 30, 2019

If your personal information ever gets hacked, you’d hope to know immediately. But that’s not likely if you’re not paying attention.

“Different types of data are subject to different types of risks,” writes Thomas Stephens in the January/February issue of CPA Voice. “Accordingly, our detection mechanisms must recognize this reality.”

Personal hacks are different than corporate hacks. For instance, Stephens suggests establishing settings on your online financial accounts to send notifications to you to keep you aware of any changes in your accounts. For corporate hacks, it can be more complicated.

“When a hacker attempts to breach a corporate network, the effort is often directed to obtaining large volumes of data in the attack, instead of the data associated with a single entity, such as a customer or a team member,” Stephens says. “Many of the widely reported corporate breaches in the past 10 years – including Yahoo, Target, and Equifax – have involved more than 100 million records in each attack.”

To learn more about the signs you or your company have been hacked, read the article online now.CPA Voice

Don’t miss this convenient, self-study CPE

Did you know that reading CPA Voice can help you satisfy your CPE requirement? No matter your location or the time of day – and even without the benefit of electricity – you can gain CPE credit with each issue.

Every edition includes a 12-question self-assessment exam covering content from that issue. Receive a grade of 75% or higher and you’ll earn one hour of CPE credit in specialized knowledge.

Best of all, you can take the exam when and where it’s convenient for you. Exams remain available online – and may be completed for CPE – through the same month of the following year.

January/February 2019 exam