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Data leak exposes tens of millions of private records from corporations and government agencies

The data leak, which affected American Airlines, Maryland’s health department and New York’s Metropolitan Transportation Authority, among others, led to the exposure of at least 38 million records, including employee information as well as data related to Covid-19 vaccinations, contact tracing and testing appointments, according to UpGuard, the cybersecurity firm that uncovered the issue.

After UpGuard privately notified Microsoft and the affected organizations, the leaks were plugged and the ability to access the information removed. But while the information was unsecured, names, Social Security numbers, phone numbers, dates of birth, demographic information, addresses and even dates of employer drug tests and union membership data were available to anyone with the know-how and inclination to look, said UpGuard.

In the case of Ford Motor Co., UpGuard said, lists of loaner vehicles distributed to dealerships had also been exposed.

“When we learned about the issue, we acted quickly to assess the risk (low) and close the gap,” Ford spokesman T.R. Reid told CNN Business. “There was no breach of sensitive personal information.”

It is unclear which federal agencies may have been affected by the issue.

Several of the impacted organizations contacted by CNN Business, including American Airlines, the Maryland health agency, the MTA and New York’s Department of Education, confirmed that their systems have been secured and that there is no indication their data was improperly accessed.

Microsoft told CNN that only a small number of its customers had configured their systems in a way that allowed data to be accessed by unauthorized viewers.

“We take security and privacy seriously, and we encourage our customers to use best practices when configuring products in ways that best meet their privacy needs,” a Microsoft spokesperson said in a statement. The company has since altered the software’s security settings so that it is more restrictive by default for some users.

At least 47 organizations had been unknowingly exposing their information due to the misconfiguration, UpGuard said in a report published Monday summarizing its work. The company told CNN that there may well have been more organizations that it did not find out about. Because the issue had not been previously identified, it was not something most organizations knew to look for in their existing security audits, said Kelly Rethmeyer, a spokesperson for UpGuard.

“That’s what made so many organizations vulnerable to this potential problem,” Rethmeyer said, adding that “for the most part, our experience was people were very amenable to wanting to get on top of this quickly and correct it, and nobody was aware this was a potential security concern.”

Other organizations cited in UpGuard’s report include the freight giant J.B. Hunt, the state government of Indiana and Microsoft itself. J.B. Hunt didn’t immediately respond to a request for comment. A spokesperson for the state of Indiana declined to comment beyond a press release issued by state health officials disclosing the leak.

In a statement, American Airlines said its version of the misconfiguration affected “business contact information pertaining to corporate travel managers.”

“Passenger data was not impacted,” said company spokesperson Andrea Koos. “We appreciate the work security companies such as UpGuard perform to keep our business and customers safe.”

Charles Gischlar, a spokesperson for Maryland’s health department, said the agency investigated the UpGuard report and found that “there was nothing to suggest any kind of disclosure of personal identifiable information or personal health information at any point.”

A spokesperson for New York City schools said the department is committed to protecting the privacy of its school communities, and that steps were immediately taken to secure the data and to prevent another leak. An MTA official told CNN no data was stolen and the issue was fixed.

The issue traces back to a privacy setting in Microsoft Power Apps, a product widely used by public and private entities to share data. Some organizations, such as public health agencies, have used Power Apps to allow members of the public to access details of their own Covid-19 test results or vaccination records. Other organizations used the software for internal record-keeping purposes.

By default, an access setting designed to limit what data a user can see and that could have prevented the leaks had been set to off, according to UpGuard’s report. UpGuard said it first discovered the issue in one organization on May 24. After scanning the web for similarly unsecured databases and finding numerous other examples, UpGuard reported the issue to Microsoft on June 24 as a potential software vulnerability. According to the report, Microsoft responded saying the settings were working as designed; Microsoft did not dispute that account to CNN.

UpGuard said it began notifying affected organizations in early July, with many plugging the leak within days. By the end of July, data hosted on a domain that appeared to support US government agencies’ use of Power Apps was no longer public, UpGuard said.

Microsoft told CNN Monday that it has changed the default settings so that organizations using Power Apps’ basic templates and design tools will have the privacy setting enabled automatically. Microsoft told CNN that other organizations doing more complex or custom development on Power Apps will still need to enable the setting themselves. Microsoft has also released a tool to help organizations verify their settings, UpGuard said.

Microsoft declined to answer CNN’s questions about whether there was a specific reason for the initial default setting. But the company said it has provided guidance to developers and made documentation readily available that advises organizations on how to properly configure the software according to their needs.

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Henri leaves tens of thousands in the Northeast without power

What was once Hurricane Henri was still dumping rain in New England on Monday night, after knocking out power to tens of thousands of homes and businesses. 

Henri carried enough muscle to batter the Northeast with high winds, and storm surge flooded streets and ripped down trees and power lines. On Sunday, more than 100,000 were left in the dark.

“Part of the state got crushed,” said New Jersey Governor Phil Murphy. “It was a huge, massive rain event. This is double digit inches in some cases of rain. Unheard of.”

In Helmetta, New Jersey, the water swept into a home so quickly that one woman said the water rose up to her basement ceiling. Everything from her appliances to clothing to furniture is gone.

“It was like an ocean coming down the street,” Sue Savage said. “We got out within a half an hour. A boat came and got us.”

Spotswood police chief Michael Zarro Jr. detailed extensive structural damage in the neighborhood, noting parts were “completely engulfed in water.”

People in other parts of New Jersey had to be rescued, including more than 85 people in Newark.

Henri tore through New York City on Saturday night with a torrential rainfall, setting a record for the most rain in a single hour, with nearly 2 inches. The downpour forced a halt to the star-studded Homecoming Concert in Central Park. 

Henri slammed into Rhode Island’s coast as it made landfall Sunday afternoon before limping off to sea. Late Monday afternoon, three tornadoes were recorded outside of Boston. In Helmetta, the water had receded, but dumpsters were filling up fast with debris. Out of the 73 homes in the neighborhood, more than half suffered extensive flooding damage. 

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US Coronavirus: Tens of thousands of vaccinated people may catch Covid-19. But the unvaccinated are ‘the big highway of transmission,’ experts say

The severity of the illness — not the number of people who contract the virus — is a crucial concept for people to understand at this point in the pandemic, said Dr. Rochelle Walensky, who heads the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

“I think we all have to recognize that with 164 million people who are vaccinated, we should expect tens of thousands, perhaps, of breakthrough infections,” Walensky told CNN’s Wolf Blitzer on Thursday.

“Those breakthrough infections have mild illness. They are staying out of the hospital. They are not dying, and I think that that’s the most important thing to understand,” Walensky added.

As the Delta variant of the coronavirus rips through the US, it is especially devastating regions with low vaccination rates as experts and government officials nationwide urge people to get their shots before a dire situation gets even worse.
As of Thursday, roughly half (49.9%) of the US population is fully vaccinated, CDC data shows, and 58.4% received at least one dose.

Full vaccination is necessary for optimal protection against Covid-19 — especially the highly contagious Delta variant, which accounted for more than 93% of all cases in the US this week.

Dr. William Schaffner, a professor at Vanderbilt University Medical Center, echoed Walensky’s take on how vaccination lowers the intensity of Covid-19 symptoms when breakthrough cases happen.

“This is largely a problem when it comes to severe disease, the disease that requires hospitalization, it’s among the unvaccinated. It really is pretty unusual to have a vaccinated person be hospitalized. Most of those people tend to be older and very, very frail. They never were able to respond to the vaccine, and we have the occasional immunocompromised person whose immune system also couldn’t respond optimally to the vaccine,” Schaffner told CNN on Thursday.

“So the unvaccinated continue to be the big highway of transmission. The vaccinated, they’re little side streets. Let’s not get preoccupied with that. We need to get more people vaccinated.”

And if more people do in fact get their shots, case surges can be controlled in a matter of weeks, Walensky said Thursday.

“However, our models show that if we don’t (vaccinate people), we could be up to several hundred thousand cases a day, similar to our surge in early January,” she said.

The good news is that vaccinations have picked up.

Dr. Cyrus Shahpar, data director at the White House, tweeted Thursday that there was the largest daily number of doses administered in more than a month.
More than 864,000 doses had been reported administered over the previous day’s total, including about 585,000 people who got their first shot, he said. An average of around 677,000 doses have been administered each day over the past seven days, according to data on Thursday.

Back-to-school season is looking grim amid Delta surge

But even as vaccinations rise, some children who have gone back to school have tested positive for Covid-19.

Arizona’s second largest school district is dealing with 103 active cases of the virus, according to the district’s online Covid-19 dashboard. Since the school year began on July 21 in Chandler Unified School District, there has been a total of more than 140 cases.

“We will continue to monitor confirmed cases and make adjustments to our mitigation plan as necessary,” Chandler Unified School District spokesperson Terry Locke told CNN Thursday.

Only students who exhibit symptoms are required to quarantine in Chandler, and it is optional for all students with known exposure to Covid-19, regardless of their vaccination status.

Meanwhile, Indianapolis Public Schools officials on Tuesday notified the parents of 61 fourth-grade students that their child must “quarantine for 14 days after coming in close contact with a school staff member who tested positive for Covid-19,” district spokesperson Alpha Garrett said in a statement.

The students will continue learning remotely during their quarantine, Garrett added, and said the district requires students to wear masks regardless of vaccination status.

Masking students in schools is exactly what Walensky is urging districts to do as children under 12 years old remain ineligible for a vaccine.

“In the meantime, please know that the best way to protect your unvaccinated children is to surround them with vaccinated people,” Walensky said Thursday. “Our children deserve to have full-time, in-person, safe learning with prevention measures in place, and that includes masking for everyone in schools.”

But that may not be the case in Arkansas, where two legislative measures didn’t pass Thursday in the state’s House Public Health Committee that would have allowed local school districts to require masks for children under 12.

Republican Gov. Asa Hutchinson said he was “disappointed” by the vote.

“It is conservative, reasonable and compassionate to allow local school districts to protect those students who are under 12 and not eligible for the Covid-19 vaccine,” the governor tweeted following the vote. “If we are going to have a successful school year then the local school districts need to have flexibility to protect those that are at risk.”
Arkansas is among the states seeing the brunt of Covid-19 surges, with a little over 37% of its total population vaccinated as of Thursday, CDC data shows.

Vaccine mandates are picking up

First it was the mask mandates. Now vaccinations are being required by multiple entities — public and private.

California public health officials on Thursday moved to require the state’s nearly two million health care workers to be fully vaccinated against Covid-19, becoming the first state to take this step.

The state Department of Public Health is also mandating that hospitals and nursing homes verify that visitors are fully vaccinated or have tested negative for the coronavirus.

The move comes as the state sees yet another Covid-19 surge, despite more than 53% of the state’s population being fully vaccinated, CDC data shows.

“As we continue to see an increase in cases and hospitalizations due to the Delta variant of COVID-19, it’s important that we protect the vulnerable patients in these settings,” said Dr. Tomás J. Aragón, the state’s health officer.

In Florida, where the positivity rate is among the highest in the country, the Jackson Health System has decided to require all of its employees, physicians and students to be fully vaccinated, CEO Carlos Migoya said Thursday.

And vaccination will have its perks. Eligible employees who are fully vaccinated by September 30 will receive a one-time payment of $150 in recognition of their decision, Migoya said.

Those who do not receive at least one dose of a vaccine by August 23 will be required to wear an N95 mask at all times while inside Jackson facilities, including clinical and non-clinical areas.

In Miami-Dade County, employees will be mandated to show Covid-19 vaccination proof or be tested weekly for the virus, Mayor Daniella Levine Cava said Thursday. The policy will become effective the week of August 16 for non-union employees, and exceptions will be evaluated on a case-by-case basis, Levine Cava added.

Virginia and Hawaii officials Thursday announced similar policies of proof-of-vaccination or weekly testing for their state employees.

Hawaii’s announcement came on the same day it set a new single-day record for new coronavirus cases, with 655 reported Thursday.

“This alarming rise in cases will not end on its own,” Hawaii Health Director Dr. Libby Char said. “The return to normalcy we were all fighting so hard to attain is in jeopardy.”

CNN’s Lauren Mascarenhas, Michael Nedelman, Melissa Alonso, Elizabeth Stuart, Deidre McPhillips, Rebekah Riess, Cheri Mossburg, Raja Razek and Andy Rose contributed to this report.



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Tens of thousands protest outside Netanyahu’s home ahead of Israel’s election

Tens of thousands of Israelis protested outside Prime Minister Benjamin NetanyahuBenjamin (Bibi) NetanyahuMORE’s house Saturday, just three days before the country’s election.

In footage captured at the demonstration, protesters called for an end to Netanyahu’s 12-year rule as the country heads into its fourth election in two years. The protest was the largest against Netanyahu this year, with local media estimating the crowd topping 20,000 people, according to a report from Reuters. 

Netanyahu’s Likud Party is anticipated to win the most parliamentary seats in the March 23 election, though it is unclear if it will be able to win a majority by itself or form one with another party.

The demonstrations also come as Netanyahu remains embroiled in an alleged corruption scandal over charges of bribery, fraud and breach of trust. The prime minister maintains his innocence.

Israel’s fourth snap election of two years was sparked in December when its parliament missed a deadline to pass a budget. The breakdown occurred over a dispute between Netanyahu and Defense Minister Benny Gantz over the national budget, which is critical to the power-sharing agreement formed between them after the third election. The election would have ushered Gantz into the role of prime minister in November 2021.

Netanyahu has been aided in past elections by his close relationship with former President TrumpDonald TrumpIllinois House passes resolution condemning state rep. for ‘standing with insurrectionists’ Florida Democrats call for election redo after former state senator allegedly tampered with race Biden and Harris discuss voting rights with Stacey Abrams in Atlanta MORE. The White House moved the U.S. Embassy to Jerusalem, recognized Israeli sovereignty over the Golan Heights region and helped usher in peace deals with four majority Arab nations, helping the prime minister argue that his bond with Washington was key to Israel’s prosperity. 

While the relationship with the U.S. will likely change under President BidenJoe BidenRussia, China tensions rise with White House  New challenges emerge for Biden after strong start Feinstein opens door to supporting filibuster reform MORE, who has taken a tougher stance on Israeli actions in the West Bank, Netanyahu has still expressed optimism that Jerusalem’s new ties with Arab states and its rapid coronavirus vaccination program will keep him in his post.



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The U.S. Is Sitting on Tens of Millions of Vaccine Doses the World Needs

“If we have a surplus, we’re going to share it with the rest of the world,” Mr. Biden told reporters on Wednesday, speaking generally about the U.S. vaccine supply. “We’re going to start off making sure Americans are taken care of first.”

Johnson & Johnson, which has authorization for its vaccine in the United States but fell behind on its production targets in both the United States and Europe, recently asked the United States to loan 10 million doses to the European Union, but the Biden administration also denied that request, according to American and European officials.

The European Union has come under fierce criticism for “vaccine nationalism” and protectionism, which intensified last week when Italy blocked a small shipment of doses to Australia, stepping up a tug of war over badly needed shots. Still, the European Union exported 34 million doses of coronavirus vaccines in recent weeks to dozens of countries, even as it faced shortages at home.

As frustrations simmer, some European officials are blaming the United States. The European Council president, Charles Michel, said the United States, along with Britain, “have imposed an outright ban on the export of vaccines or vaccine components produced on their territory.” Asked on Thursday about the American supply of the AstraZeneca vaccine, Jen Psaki, the White House press secretary, told reporters that vaccine manufacturers were free to export their products made in the United States while also fulfilling the terms of their contracts with the government.

But because AstraZeneca’s vaccine was produced with help from the Defense Production Act, Mr. Biden has to approve shipments of doses overseas. Such a move could have huge negative political repercussions as long as Americans are still clamoring for shots.

AstraZeneca is also likely to want liability protection for doses shipped overseas, like it would have in the United States if the vaccine is cleared.

Meantime, regulators in the United States have been waiting for new AstraZeneca data, expected in the next few weeks, from a Phase 3 trial that enrolled 32,000 participants mostly in the United States. AstraZeneca is not likely to report results from an early look at its data, as other vaccine makers have done. It will instead wait for more statistically meaningful results after trial participants have been monitored longer for side effects and more people in the vaccine and placebo groups may have gotten sick, federal officials said. Experts believe the vaccine is unlikely to carry a higher efficacy rate than the shot made by Johnson & Johnson, which uses a similar technology and requires only one dose.

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US Coronavirus: US Covid-19 numbers may be slowing but experts project tens of thousands more deaths in next 3 months

Another 91,000 Americans are projected to lose their life to the virus by June 1, the latest forecast from the University of Washington’s Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation shows.
“The most uncertain driver of the trajectory of the epidemic over the next four months is how individuals will respond to steady declines in daily cases and deaths,” the IHME team wrote. “More rapid increases in mobility or reductions in mask use can easily lead to increasing cases and deaths in many states in April.”
The spread of Covid-19 variants are also threatening to cause another surge of cases — particularly, the B.1.1.7 variant, first identified in the UK. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention previously warned of the variant’s projected “rapid growth” across the US in early 2021, adding it will likely become the predominant variant in the country by March.
The IHME team wrote that while the B.1.1.7 variant currently likely accounts for less than 20% of infections, that number could jump to 80% by late April.

It’s why experts say the US should also ramp up its testing: not just to track infections and antibodies, but variants as well.

“We have been behind on testing from day one,” Kathleen Sebelius, former Health and Human Services Secretary, said Saturday. The US now needs to “focus on both testing that we need to identify who has the disease, and then the serology tests that will tell us more about antibodies and what kind of variant is circulating.”

5.5% of US fully vaccinated

While vaccinations are ongoing, it’s unlikely they’ll help the US reach herd immunity levels any time soon.

So far, more than 42.8 million Americans have received at least the first dose of a Covid-19 vaccine, according to CDC data.

More than 17.8 million people have been fully vaccinated. That’s about 5.5% of the US population.

Herd immunity is reached when the majority of the population becomes immune to an infectious disease — either through infection and recovery or through vaccination. Dr. Anthony Fauci estimates between 70 to 85% of the US population needs to be immune for herd immunity to take effect against the virus.

The IHME team wrote they do not expect the country will reach herd immunity before next winter.

“The model suggests that we should have a quiet summer,” IHME Director Dr. Chris Murray told CNN Friday. “But we know Covid’s really seasonal, so when the next winter rolls around, we need to have a much higher level of protection to stop Covid in its tracks than we’re likely to achieve.”

To speed up getting at least the first doses into arms, the US should consider delaying the second dose of vaccines, another expert said.

“Everybody needs a second dose, there’s no question about that,” Dr. Ashish Jha, dean of the Brown University School of Public Health, said Friday. “I think the question is, right now we wait four weeks between first and second dose. What if we went six weeks or eight weeks or 10 weeks — not much longer than that.”

His comments came the same day two top US officials — Andy Slavitt, senior adviser to the White House Covid-19 response team and Fauci — said they don’t think the US should delay or skip second vaccine doses. Jha says his suggestion is middle ground to vaccinate more high-risk people quickly.

Teachers’ union calls CDC guidelines ‘safety guard rail’

Amid ongoing challenges for vaccinations and concerns of another case uptick, local leaders are also working to navigate what a safe return to class looks like.

School reopening guidelines released by the CDC this month focus on five key Covid-19 mitigation strategies: the universal and correct wearing of masks; physical distancing; washing hands; cleaning facilities and improving ventilation; and contact tracing, isolation and quarantine.

Vaccine and testing are “additional layers” of protection, the agency said.

On Friday, CDC Director. Dr. Rochelle Walensky told a White House briefing that with those strategies, schools may open no matter how much virus is spreading within a community.

“There are opportunities for in-person learning at all stages of … community spread,” Walensky said. “I would actually invite schools to lean in and to look at what is needed … to try and get more and more children back to school.”

Randi Weingarten, the president of the American Federation of Teachers, told CNN Saturday the agency’s guidelines are a “safety guard rail” for teachers — and in a recent poll, most educators said they’d be comfortable returning to class with the help of testing, vaccine prioritization and mitigation strategies in place.

But so far, only about 28 states and Washington, DC, have started allowing all or some teachers and school staff to receive the vaccine.

And schools face another challenge when it comes to reopening for in-person instruction, Weingarten added.

When schools do put some of those measures in place, including smaller class sizes and social distancing, they need more space and more educators, Weingarten, said.

“The reason that you have so many places that are in hybrid is because they don’t have the space and they don’t have the educators,” she said. “The real issue right now is how do we help take the places that are on remote and turn it around.”

CNN’s Maggie Fox and Lauren Mascarenhas contributed to this report.

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