A million airport parking customers affected in huge data breach


A million Park’N Fly customers have had their sensitive data stolen after the company suffered a cyberattack.

The news was confirmed in a data breach notification letter sent out by the company, which noted the threat actors accessed the company’s IT infrastructure in July 2024 using stolen VPN credentials. The crooks stole people’s full names, email addresses, postal addresses, Aeroplan numbers, and CAA numbers. No payment data was taken, the company confirmed.

Read more…
Source: MSN News


Sign up for our Newsletter


Related:

  • What Does an Internal Attack Resulting in a Data Breach Look Like in Today’s Threat Landscape?

    February 3, 2022

    A common scenario is one in which an attacker gains access to an internal network via a compromised workstation that has been infected with malware, invariably via a social engineering email attack. No enterprise is immune to this type of insider attack. We all, at some point, took the bait and clicked unsolicited links masquerading ...

  • Telco fined €9 million for hiding cyberattack impact from customers

    February 1, 2022

    The Greek data protection authority has imposed fines of 5,850,000 EUR ($6.55 million) to COSMOTE and 3,250,000 EUR ($3.65 million) to OTE, for leaking sensitive customer communication due to a cyberattack. As the agency says in an announcement, COSMOTE infringed at least eight articles of the GDPR, including violating its duty to inform affected customers of ...

  • Red Cross Begs Attackers Not to Leak 515K People’s Stolen Data

    January 20, 2022

    The Red Cross is imploring threat actors to show mercy by abstaining from leaking data belonging to 515,000+ “highly vulnerable” people that were stolen from a program used to reunite family members split apart by war, disaster or migration. “While we don’t know who is responsible for this attack, or why they carried it out, we ...

  • Former DHS official charged with stealing govt employees’ PII

    January 14, 2022

    A former Department of Homeland Security acting inspector general pleaded guilty today to stealing confidential and proprietary software and sensitive databases from the US government containing employees’ personal identifying information (PII). 61-year-old Charles Kumar Edwards coordinated the scheme while working for DHS-OIG (Department of Homeland Security, Office of Inspector General) as an employee and acting IG ...

  • California town announces data breach involving police department, loan provider

    January 10, 2022

    Grass Valley, California has announced an extensive data breach involving the Social Security numbers and more of all city employees and vendors — as well as anyone who had their information given to the local police department. The city said in a notice that Social Security numbers, driver’s license numbers, and health insurance information was leaked ...

  • FlexBooker apologizes for breach of 3.7 million user records, partial credit card information

    January 7, 2022

    Scheduling platform FlexBooker apologized this week for a data breach that involved the sensitive information of 3.7 million users. In a statement, the company told ZDNet a portion of its customer database had been breached after its AWS servers were compromised on December 23. FlexBooker said their “system data storage was also accessed and downloaded” as ...