A previous female designer of Amazon Web Services (AWS) was viewed as at fault for breaking into the distributed storage frameworks of more than 100 million clients and gathering data connected with the 2019 Capital One break. AWS is the cloud division of retail behemoth Amazon. Regarding her arrangement to hack into distributed computing records and take information and figure assets for her benefit, Paige Thompson, a 36-year-old former tech specialist, was found blameworthy in Seattle’s US District Court of seven government crimes. After Capital One educated the FBI regarding Thompson’s hacking conduct, she was confined in July 2019.
Notwithstanding five charges of unapproved admittance to a safeguarded PC, Thompson was also seen as at fault for obliterating a safeguarded PC. In any case, she was viewed as not at real fault for access gadget misrepresentation and serious wholesale fraud by the jury. “She needed information, she needed cash, and she needed to gloat,” Assistant US Attorney Andrew Friedman said. More than 100 million US clients were undermined by the break of Capital One records. The firm paid a $190 million settlement to determine client claims and another $80 million in punishment.