Data Dump 2016 Free [portable] — Turkish Police

: A database containing the personal details of 49,611,709 citizens was posted on a public website (hosted in Romania or Iceland) for free download. This leak was partially verified by the Associated Press. What Data Was Exposed?

The leaked files contained highly sensitive that remains useful for identity theft today, as core identifiers like birth dates and ID numbers do not change. turkish police data dump 2016 free

The year 2016 saw two distinct but frequently conflated data incidents: : A database containing the personal details of

: The group Anonymous released roughly 18GB of data claimed to be from the General Directorate of Security (EGM) , Turkey's national police. While advertised as "police data," some security experts noted it contained census-style information rather than internal law enforcement records. turkish police data dump 2016 free

64bit ISO images only for OMV3

Starting today there will be only 64bit ISO images for OMV3 to download. If you still need a 32bit installation, then use the Debian 32bit netinstall ISO image and install OMV3 manually.

New update available

The following changes were made: openmediavault 1.8 Update locales. Improve omv-config command. Use –show to display the configuration data as JSON from the given XPath. Mantis 0001141: smartd: Reference disks by ATA-/SCSI-Id. Mantis 0001230: Filesystems (EXT4) need to be initialized as 64bit filesystems to be able to grow >16TiB. This is not supported on 32bit … Read more

: A database containing the personal details of 49,611,709 citizens was posted on a public website (hosted in Romania or Iceland) for free download. This leak was partially verified by the Associated Press. What Data Was Exposed?

The leaked files contained highly sensitive that remains useful for identity theft today, as core identifiers like birth dates and ID numbers do not change.

The year 2016 saw two distinct but frequently conflated data incidents:

: The group Anonymous released roughly 18GB of data claimed to be from the General Directorate of Security (EGM) , Turkey's national police. While advertised as "police data," some security experts noted it contained census-style information rather than internal law enforcement records.