Canada’s largest school board says hackers may have accessed some 40 years' worth of student data during the recent ...
Bleeping Computer on Wednesday also reported that an extortion note the attacker sent to PowerSchool claimed that the ...
The hack has the potential to be one of the biggest of the year, but the edtech giant is refusing to answer important ...
A Toronto youth organization and two school boards are calling on city council to make young people a financial priority in ...
Queen’s Park has issued a reminder to the deficit-ridden Thames Valley District school board about their responsibility to ...
Some said the Pride flag promotes inclusion of LGBTQ students and urged trustees to change a “backward policy that has caused ...
The Toronto District School Board is closing five of its 12 federally funded sites for newcomer English training programs due ...
The data breach hit several North American school boards, including Toronto District School Board, York Region District ...
Ontario MPP Michael Ford says he will not run for office in the next provincial election that is expected to be held in ...
The PowerSchool data breach has impacted school boards across North America, with Canada's largest saying about 1.49 million students dating back to 1985 were impacted.
Software made by the company PowerSchool, which stores data for boards across the continent, was subject to a high-profile breach at the beginning of the year.
Based in Folsom, California, PowerSchool serves 16,000 schools globally and manages data for over 60 million students. On January 7, the company confirmed that attackers had ...