The Guardian Australia

Former Uber security chief found guilty of concealing data breach

- Guardian staff and agency

A San Francisco jury has found Uber’s former chief security officer, Joe Sullivan, guilty of criminal obstructio­n for failing to report a 2016 cybersecur­ity incident to authoritie­s.

Sullivan, who was fired from Uber in 2017, was found guilty on counts of obstructio­n of justice and deliberate concealmen­t of felony, a spokespers­on from the US justice department confirmed on Wednesday.

“Sullivan affirmativ­ely worked to hide the data breach from the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) and took steps to prevent the hackers from being caught,” said Stephanie Hinds, US attorney for the northern district of California.

The case was being watched as an important precedent regarding the culpabilit­y of individual security staffers and executives when handling cybersecur­ity incidents, a concern that has only grown at a time when reports of ransomware attacks have surged and cybersecur­ity insurance premiums have risen.

The case pertains to a breach of Uber’s systems that affected data of 57m passengers and drivers.

The breach took place in 2016, but Uber only disclosed it publicly a year later. Public disclosure­s of security breaches are required by law in many US states, with most regulation­s mandating that the notificati­on be made “in the most expedient time possible and without unreasonab­le delay”.

Uber’s revelation­s sparked several federal and state inquiries. In September 2018, Uber paid $148m (£130m) to settle claims by all 50 US states and Washington DC that it was too slow to disclose the hacking. The two hackers involved in the year pleaded guilty to hacking Uber and then extorting Uber’s “bug bounty” security research program the following year.

The justice department filed criminal charges against Sullivan in 2020. At the time, prosecutor­s alleged he arranged to pay the hackers $100,000 (£87,964) in bitcoin and had them sign nondisclos­ure agreements that falsely stated they had not stolen data.

Sullivan was also accused of withholdin­g informatio­n from Uber officials who could have disclosed the breach to the FTC, which had been evaluating the San Francisco-based company’s data security following a 2014 breach.

In July, Uber accepted responsibi­lity for covering up the breach and agreed to cooperate with the prosecutio­n of Sullivan over his alleged role in concealing the hacking, as part of a settlement with US prosecutor­s to avoid criminal charges.

Sullivan’s lawyer David Angeli and the FTC did not immediatel­y respond to a request for comment.

 ?? Photograph: Seth Wenig/AP ?? Joe Sullivan was fired from Uber in 2017. He was found guilty on counts of obstructio­n of justice and deliberate concealmen­t of felony.
Photograph: Seth Wenig/AP Joe Sullivan was fired from Uber in 2017. He was found guilty on counts of obstructio­n of justice and deliberate concealmen­t of felony.

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