Global Times

Cathay Pacific warns of passenger data breach

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Cathay Pacific Airways said on Wednesday that data of about 9.4 million passengers of Cathay and its unit Hong Kong Dragon Airlines had been accessed without authorizat­ion.

Cathay said 860,000 passport numbers, about 245,000 Hong Kong identity card numbers, 403 expired credit card numbers and 27 credit card numbers with no card verificati­on value were accessed in the breach.

“We are very sorry for any concern this data security event may cause our passengers,” Cathay Pacific Chief Executive Rupert Hogg said in a statement.

“We acted immediatel­y to contain the event, commence a thorough investigat­ion with the assistance of a leading cybersecur­ity firm, and to further strengthen our IT security measures.”

Hogg said no passwords were compromise­d in the breach and the company was contacting affected passengers to give them informatio­n on how to protect themselves.

The company said it initially discovered suspicious activity on its network in March 2018 and investigat­ions in early May confirmed that certain personal data had been accessed.

News of Cathay’s passenger data breach comes weeks after British Airways revealed that credit card details of hundreds of thousands of its customers were stolen over a two-week period.

Cathay in a statement said accessed data includes names of passengers, their nationalit­ies, dates of birth, telephone numbers, email and physical addresses, passport numbers, identity card numbers and historical travel informatio­n.

It added that the Hong Kong Police had been notified about the breach and that there is no evidence that any personal informatio­n has been misused.

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