The buyer did not use the information incorrectly, but they should not have initially been accessible to unknown people.
The contents of cheap used hard drives were far from normal. The hard disk of the image is not related to the case. Colourbox
The flea market sometimes makes discoveries in many meanings of the word. Dutch Robert Pole In the case, the discovery was quite shocking instead of a happy surprise.
The Register says that 62-year-old Polet has been interested in computers and equipment for decades. In addition, he enjoys shooting with both ordinary camera and droons.
Of course, the footage also needs storage space. Coincidentally, Polet ended up buying five hard disks from a flea market, located next to Weelde Airport in Belgium near the Netherlands border.
The hard drives each pulled 500 gigabytes of data and cost only five euros a piece. Normally, this would have been a pretty good catch, but the content of the hard drives was far from normal.
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Polet found a large number of personal information related to people’s medical care, dating from 2011-2019. They were mainly related to people living in the Utrecht, Houten and Delft regions in the Netherlands.
The information included, among other things, personal identification number, birth times, addresses and medical history, says The Register. Thus, a less law -abiding buyer would have had cat days to train identity theft through information.
The same seller had had more similar hard drives on sale. According to The Register, after his discovery, Polet drove to the flea market again and also bought the remaining hard drives.
Based on the wires on the hard drives, Polet found that the information came from a company called Nortade ICT Solutions, which produced IT solutions for the health care sector.
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However, according to The Register, the company has ceased operations and its websites are no longer upright.
The question is why the company’s data -retained data had not been destroyed and how it had been in the flea market. The Register knows that, under the law of the Netherlands, only a professional can empty a hard disk containing health information, and emptying must be ensured.
Security company Malwarebytes He thinks that the company may not have been emptied as it would have become expensive. By selling hard drives, they would have also made at least a little more money.

