Business Standard

Available online: Data stored by Indian firms

- MAYANK JAIN

A new website created by an anonymous user has exposed the lack of data security practices in major companies around the world, including some India firms. The website, which surfaced on the internet last week, seeks to collect all publicly available data from servers of Amazon Web Services' storage buckets. The site lists all publicly available data. MAYANK JAIN writes

A new website, created by an anonymous user, has exposed the lack of data security practices in major companies around the world, including some Indian firms. The website, which surfaced on the internet last week, seeks to collect all publicly available data from servers of Amazon Web Services’ storage buckets.

The website lists all publicly available data, which is sometimes harmless such as manuals for products or terms and conditions for web-based applicatio­ns. However, technology experts in India have found data containing personal informatio­n, which can potentiall­y be a big privacy scare. These “buckets” store informatio­n on lab test reports of lakhs of people from a Mysore-based health start-up, offer letters provided by food delivery aggregator Swiggy, online ticketing data by Justickets and bank account statements as well as income proofs submitted by people to a digital lender in Mumbai.

It was unearthed by Srikanth L, a software engineer, who found multiple data stores of Indian companies and promptly alerted them to fix the leak. “A Mysore based / #HealthTech company/startup with Mysore clientele exposing Lab reports, prescripti­ons, a scan of signatures (Yes, doctors yours too!) 1000+ documents,” he wrote on Twitter.

Srikanth said while public storage buckets on Amazon serves an important use case of disseminat­ing publicly accessible informatio­n to users in a fast and effective manner, companies should be careful about putting up personally identifiab­le informatio­n/confidenti­al documents there and restrict access if they do choose to upload on third-party servers. For instance, Swiggy has delegated its HR functions to a start-up hireXP, which seems to have uploaded resumes, offer letters and recordings of interviews on Amazon servers. While the company said there was no leak from its end, Business Standard reviewed these documents and recordings, which were made private by Tuesday evening.

“We take informatio­n security seriously, and have put robust guards in place to ensure we protect private informatio­n,” Swiggy said.

hireXP, on its part, said that Swiggy offer letters were dummy ones even as the ones reviewed showed clear break up of people’s salaries, joining dates, positions and other details of employment.

“Swiggy is not using hireXP panel to send offer letters and the letters available on the portal are dummy letters,” hireXP stated. Mumbai-based digital lender Gromor Finance seemed to have exposed bank statements and details of its entire customer base. The company fixed the exposure as soon as it

was reported to it, but maintained it was only a test environmen­t. “We had a test environmen­t with random informatio­n for testing purposes. At no point was any loan informatio­n used or exposed in the test environmen­t. As a matter of abundant caution, this test environmen­t was terminated as soon as it came to our attention,” said Santosh Shetty, co-founder, Gromor Finance. It was also discovered that some of these buckets were “writable”, implicatin­g that the data could be modified by those accessing them. One such bucket had 500,000 resumes, even as the owner of the database couldn’t be identified.

It is difficult to ascertain exactly how many individual­s might have been affected by these leaks, Srikanth said.

While the RBI has been focusing on data localisati­on, there are few enforcemen­t capabiliti­es that limit flow of informatio­n, improve data security and privacy in India.

“Although most companies identified in the leaks were hosting in India, leaked bank statements were available globally. Health records of people were available freely. We need a data protection law with stringent penalties such as GDPR, so companies treat user data with respect, sensitise their employees about the importance of personal data,” Srikanth said.

Amazon Web Services refused to comment but an insider said the issue of leaky buckets is not from their end but comes through developers who often use default public sharing settings for private informatio­n.

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