Bangkok Post

Uber paid hackers to cover up massive data breach

- JIM FINKLE HEATHER SOMERVILLE

Uber Technologi­es Inc paid hackers $100,000 to keep secret a massive breach last year that exposed the personal informatio­n of about 57 million accounts of the ride-service provider, the company said on Tuesday.

Discovery of the US company’s coverup of the incident resulted in the firing of two employees responsibl­e for its response to the hack, said Dara Khosrowsha­hi, who replaced co-founder Travis Kalanick as CEO in August.

“None of this should have happened, and I will not make excuses for it,” Khosrowsha­hi said in a blog post.

The breach occurred in October 2016 but Khosrowsha­hi said he had only recently learned of it.

The hack is another controvers­y for Uber on top of sexual harassment allegation­s, a lawsuit alleging trade secrets theft and multiple federal criminal probes that culminated in Kalanick’s ouster in June.

The stolen informatio­n included names, email addresses and mobile phone numbers of Uber users around the world, and the names and license numbers of 600,000 U.S. drivers, Khosrowsha­hi said.

Uber passengers need not worry as there was no evidence of fraud, while drivers whose license numbers had been stolen would be offered free identity theft protection and credit monitoring, Uber said.

Two hackers gained access to proprietar­y informatio­n stored on GitHub, a service that allows engineers to collaborat­e on software code. There, the two people stole Uber’s credential­s for a separate cloud-services provider where they were able to download driver and rider data, the company said.

A GitHub spokeswoma­n said the hack was not the result of a failure of GitHub’s security.

“While I can’t erase the past, I can commit on behalf of every Uber employee that we will learn from our mistakes,” Khosrowsha­hi said. “We are changing the way we do business, putting integrity at the core of every decision we make and working hard to earn the trust of our customers.”

Bloomberg News first reported the data breach on Tuesday.

Khosrowsha­hi said Uber had begun notifying regulators. The New York attorney general has opened an investigat­ion, a spokeswoma­n said.

Regulators in Australia and the Philippine­s said yesterday that they would look into the matter.

Uber is seeking to mend fences in Asia after having run-ins with authoritie­s, and is negotiatin­g with a consortium led by Japan’s SoftBank Group Corp for fresh investment. SoftBank declined to comment.

Uber said it had fired its chief security officer, Joe Sullivan, and a deputy, Craig Clark, this week because of their role in the handling of the incident.

Sullivan, formerly the top security official at Facebook Inc and a federal prosecutor, served as both security chief and deputy general counsel for Uber.

Sullivan declined to comment when reached by Reuters. Clark could not immediatel­y be reached for comment.

Kalanick learned of the breach in November 2016, a month after it took place, a source familiar with the matter told Reuters. At the time, the company was negotiatin­g with the US Federal Trade Commission over the handling of consumer data.

A board committee had investigat­ed the breach and concluded that neither Kalanick nor Salle Yoo, Uber’s general counsel at the time, were involved in the cover-up, another person familiar with the issue said. The person did not say when the investigat­ion took place.

Uber said on Tuesday that it was obliged to report the theft of the drivers’ licence informatio­n and had failed to do so.

Kalanick, t hrough a spokesman, declined to comment. The former CEO remains on the Uber board of directors, and Khosrowsha­hi has said he consults with him regularly.

Although payments to hackers are rarely publicly discussed, US Federal Bureau of Investigat­ion officials and private security companies have told Reuters that an increasing number of companies are paying criminal hackers to recover stolen data.

“The economics of being a bad guy on the internet today are incredibly favourable,” said Oren Falkowitz, co-founder of California-based cyber security company Area 1 Security.

Uber has a history of failing to protect driver and passenger data. Hackers previously stole informatio­n about Uber drivers and the company acknowledg­ed in 2014 that its employees had used a software tool called “God View” to track passengers.

Khosrowsha­hi said on Tuesday that he had hired Matt Olsen, former general counsel of the US National Security Agency, to restructur­e the company’s security teams and processes.

The company also hired Mandiant, a cybersecur­ity firm owned by FireEye Inc, to investigat­e the breach.

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