Business World

Cathay Pacific execs grilled regarding data breach ‘crisis’

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HONG KONG — Cathay Pacific Airways said on Wednesday it is working with 27 regulators in 15 jurisdicti­ons to investigat­e a data breach that affected millions of passengers, as Hong Kong lawmakers grilled executives over how it handled the incident.

The executives did not answer repeated questions about whether the airline would compensate all affected customers or if it might face a hefty fine under new European Union privacy regulation­s, saying it was “too early” to comment.

Cathay has come under mounting criticism after it said late last month that about 9.4 million passengers’ personal data had been accessed without authorisat­ion, seven months after it became aware of the breach.

It was not immediatel­y clear who was behind the breach or what the informatio­n might be used for, but Cathay said there was no evidence so far that personal informatio­n had been misused.

“The incident is a crisis,” company Chairman John Slosar told the committee. “It is the most serious one the airline has faced.”

Slosar again apologized for failing to protect customers’ data and said he regretted that the company could not investigat­e the attack more quickly.

Shares of Cathay, which slid to a nine-year low after news of the data leak last month, were up more than 4% on Wednesday, beating a flat broader market.

Cathay said in a document submitted to Hong Kong’s Legislativ­e Council that it first detected suspicious activity on its network in March and that the attack continued in the following months and expanded in scope.

The airline then took until mid-August to conclude which passenger data had been accessed, according to the document, and it completed the identifica­tion of the personal data that pertained to each individual passenger on Oct. 24.

Mr. Slosar said that in future Cathay would instantly disclose any similar issues to the authoritie­s.

The company denied the data breach was a result of layoffs at its IT department last year.

Cathay said an airline restructur­ing had been completed and it planned to hire 1,800 staff this year.

It also said it has spent over HK$1 billion ($127.7 million) on IT infrastruc­ture and security over the past three years. —

 ?? REUTERS ?? A PASSENGER WALKS to the First Class counter of Cathay Pacific Airways at Hong Kong Airport in Hong Kong, China, April 4.
REUTERS A PASSENGER WALKS to the First Class counter of Cathay Pacific Airways at Hong Kong Airport in Hong Kong, China, April 4.

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