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Sensitive Information Of 790,000 People Published Online

Featured Replies

Sensitive Information Of 790,000 People Published Online

By Teeranai Charuvastra, Staff Reporter

 

6reginfo-696x393.jpg  

An entry from the "Stop Walk and Talk" program database of the Sixth Region Police command, with phone number and home address removed by Khaosod English.

 

BANGKOK — The information of more than 790,000 residents were published online for anyone to see on a police website.

 

The database belongs to a program called “Stop Walk and Talk” by the police force in the upper central region. It documents details such as photos, home addresses and phone numbers of locals visited by police patrol on a website openly accessible to the public.

 

Full story: http://www.khaosodenglish.com/culture/net/2017/08/23/sensitive-information-790000-people-published-online/

 
khaosodeng_logo.jpg
-- © Copyright Khaosod English 2017-08-23
Quote

“It’s general information. There’s nothing secretive about it,” Thawitchart said. “It’s just phone number and addresses.”

 

Is there any hope for these guys?

 

 

 

34 minutes ago, webfact said:

Sensitive Information Of 790,000 People Published Online

By Teeranai Charuvastra, Staff Reporter

 

  

An entry from the "Stop Walk and Talk" program database of the Sixth Region Police command, with phone number and home address removed by Khaosod English.

Errr! The phone number and address are clearly still visible. Khaosod are as vulnerable to incompetence as the cops it would seem. One hopes that the password they have put in place is a little more imaginative than the one with the foreigners details that was publicly available in March last year, and when discovered was then password protected, but they used 123456, which was cracked in no time at all. Brainless, the whole lot of them.

http://www.khaosodenglish.com/life/2016/03/28/1459141534/

Edited by webfact
Image removed //Admin

It pays to be private!  

Welcome to Thailand 4.0

 what could go wrong?

But remember, we mustn't judge a person or institution based on its reputation in Thailand. We must always give the benefit of the doubt and mindlessly trust. This way the liars and feckless won't have 'their' feelings hurt, and us the trusting public, will be perceived as being 'kind'.

 

Everyone wins?

19 hours ago, darksidedog said:

The phone number and address are clearly still visible.

Khaosod could have pixeled the people's faces too. Very shoddy.

19 hours ago, over it said:

It pays to be private!  

it pays to be incognito.. private doesn't always work

49 minutes ago, thesetat2013 said:

it pays to be incognito.. private doesn't always work

:coffee1:

I think Lt. Gen. Thawitchart Palasak, commander of the Sixth Regional Police, should go for attitude adjustment.

 

Data security rating: insufficient
 

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