

Under certain circumstances negative numbers in scientific notation were respresented as positive (ouch)! There was a serious bug in the previous versions of DataThief. Made it possible to enter the key using copy and paste Regretfully the fix introduced another bug.

The number 1.0001 was formatted as 1.0E-4. There was another bug in the formatting of numbers. The bug that was introduced in version 1.4 was repaired. When you zoom in, the motion will be even more precise.

Now you can move the point using the arrow keys on your keyboard. To move a point it is now possible to locate the mouse pointer over the point so the pointer will turn to a crosshair. View the tutorial video Changes in DataThief III version 1.7įixed a nasty little bug that sometimes caused a number to have an exponent of 1 less then it should be. The MD5sum for Datathief.jar is: 2d76e91ab76c5c1b3c59337260ae2956 Datathief.jar The manualĮven though the aim has been to create an easy to use tool, DataThief III has many possibilities that are hard to understand without the manual. Usualy downloading Datathief.jar will work.
DATATHIEF WINDOWS FULL
Java has had a serious security problem with a module called Log4j.ĭataThief does use Java, but this specific module is not included in the DataThief code, so this security problem is not present in DataThief.įor the more curious, a full list of Java modules used in DataThief is here.
DATATHIEF WINDOWS REGISTRATION
Please buy the shareware registration key from
DATATHIEF WINDOWS HOW TO
The company, which was unnamed in the court documents, required all to undergo training on how to handle consumers’ PII appropriately. The 27-year-old then stole the data and used it fraudulently for his own personal financial gain, applying for credit cards and personal loans.Īt the time that he committed the offenses, Defiore was employed as a seasonal worker for a company that supported the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) by operating contact centers to assist with Medicare enrollment and other processes. An employee at a tech company based in Virginia has been sent to prison for stealing personally identifiable information (PII) from customers and exploiting it for profit.Ĭolbi Trent Defiore accessed data belonging to more than 8,000 individuals without authorization while working at a contact center in Bogalusa, Louisiana.
