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Medibank has confirmed more customer details compromised in a recent security breach have popped up on a dark web forum, describing the illegal sale as a disgrace. The Australian health insurer is refusing to fork out any ransom payment for the data, pointing to expert advice and government guidelines. xA0; The weaponisation of peopleapos private information in an effort to extort payment is malicious and an attack on the most vulnerable members of our community, Medibank CEO David Koczkar said in a statement Thursday. The release of this stolen data on the dark web is disgra stanley cup becher ceful. The company urged the public against downloading the data, which hackers last week had threatened to begin releasing on the forum. Reports have pegged ransom demands upwards of $10 million, or $1 for each compromised customer ac stanley thermobecher count.First announced last month, the security breach compromised the personal data of 9.7 million current and former customers as well as some of their authorised r stanley thermoskannen epresentatives. Amongst those impacted were 1.8 million international customers. xA0;According to Medibank, the hackers did not access primary identity documents such as driversapos; licences for local customers, or credit card and banking information. However, they were able to access data such as names, dates of birth, addresses, phone numbers, and email addresses. Health claims data of 480,000 customers also were leaked, including locations where they had received medical services a Urbk I m a Young Black Man and I Support Donald Trump
A mother and her child sit on a bed covered with a mosquito net in Tanzania on October 30, 2009.TONY KARUMBAmdash;AFP/Getty ImagesBy Jamie DucharmeSeptember 8, 2019 6:31 PM EDTIt may be possible to eradicate malariamdash;one of history deadliest diseasesmdash;from the planet by 2050, according to a coalition of 41 leading scientists, economists and health-policy experts writing in the Lancet.Malaria is one of the oldest and deadliest diseases of humankind, says Sir Richard Feachem, one of the reportrsquo authors and co-chair of the Lancet commission on malaria eradication. If we, humankind, were to take on this challenge and era stanley cup dicate malaria by 2050, it would be an achievement of historic proportions. There would be nothing quite like it.Malaria, a mosquito-borne illness caused by a parasite, results in flu-like symptoms stanley tumbler that can be effectively treated and prevented with drugs. But the disease can be fatal if left untreated or if complications occur. Worldwide incidence has declined by 36% since 2000, and malaria is now all-but non-existent in more than half of countries worldwide. Only 1,700 cases are reported in the U.S. each year, according to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention CDC .Nonetheless, malaria remains a devastating and deadly problem in many countries, namely Nigeria and the Democratic Republic of the Congo. Fifty-five c stanley us ountries in Africa, Asia and Latin America have actually seen a rise in malaria ca