Khaleej Times

Reliance Jio probing claims of data breach

- Rahul Bhatia and Promit Mukherjee Reuters

mumbai — India’s Reliance Jio is investigat­ing whether personal data of over 100 million of its customers had leaked onto a website, in what analysts said could be the first ever large-scale breach at an Indian telecom operator.

Jio, India’s newest telecoms entrant, said that the data on the website, “Magicapk.com”, appeared to be “unauthenti­c” and that its subscriber data was safe and maintained with the highest security.

But people complained on Twitter about personal informatio­n of Jio users being publicly available on Magicapk.com, and some Indian media said that their checks had led them to believe the leak was real.

Jio declined to comment on the Indian media reports.

“We have informed law enforcemen­t agencies about the claims of the website and will follow through to ensure strict action is taken,” a Jio spokeswoma­n said.

Indian Express said it was able to cross-verify details on a number of Jio customers known to them.

“Indianexpr­ess.com checked with some Jio numbers and found that details of numbers bought as late as last week are up on the site. However, it was not clear if all the

We have informed law enforcemen­t agencies about the claims of the website and will follow through to ensure strict action is taken

Jio spokeswoma­n

numbers are available on the site, as a lot of queries were throwing a blank,” the newspaper reported.

Magicapk.com is showing as “suspended” since late on Sunday.

Rony Das, a security analyst with Defencely, an online security firm, described the likely data breach as “dangerous”.

Many users had been registered for Reliance Jio services by using a 12-digit Unique Identifica­tion Authority of India provided number, commonly known as the ‘Aadhaar’ number.

The ‘Aadhaar’ number, which works on similar lines as US Social Security numbers, is unique to every Indian citizen and it stores biometric data of users in a centralise­d database. Local tech website MediaNama said that Aadhaar informatio­n on the website had been redacted. It also said it had independen­tly verified data on the website for multiple Jio numbers, and that the data was accurate for those numbers. —

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