Scottish Daily Mail

EasyJet ‘hid’ hack of 9million customers for months

As it emerges 10million customers had details stolen:

- By Tom Payne and Miles Dilworth

EASYJET waited for four months before telling nearly 10million customers that their personal details had been stolen by hackers.

More than 2,200 credit card details were accessed and 9.8million names, email addresses and travel details stolen in the ‘highly sophistica­ted’ data breach.

The cyber attack targeted flight and holiday bookings made between mid-October last year and the beginning of March this year.

The airline first became aware of the cyber failure in late January – but wasn’t able to stop the hackers until March, and only started contacting victims last month.

EasyJet said the delay had been caused by the need to thoroughly investigat­e the breach.

A spokesman for the airline said: ‘This was a highly sophistica­ted attacker. It took time to understand the scope of the attack and to identify who had been impacted.

‘We could only inform people once the investigat­ion had progressed enough that we were able to identify whether any individual­s have been affected, who had been impacted and what informatio­n had been accessed.’

EasyJet added that there is no evidence any of the personal informatio­n has been misused and no passport details were stolen.

It is understood the breach only affects those who made the bookings, not people travelling with them.

EASYJET waited three months before telling almost 10million customers their personal details had been stolen by hackers, it emerged last night.

More than 2,200 credit card details were accessed and 9.8million names, email addresses and travel details taken in the ‘highly-sophistica­ted’ data breach.

The cyber attack – one of the largest to hit a British company – targeted flight and holiday bookings made between the middle of October last year and the beginning of March. The airline first became aware of it in late January but was not able to stop the hackers until March, and only started contacting victims last month. EasyJet said the delay was caused by the need to investigat­e the breach thoroughly.

A spokesman said: ‘This was a highly sophistica­ted attacker. It took time to understand the scope of the attack and to identify who had been impacted.

‘We could only inform people once the investigat­ion had progressed enough that we were able to identify whether any individual­s have been affected, then who had been impacted and what informatio­n had been accessed.’

EasyJet added that there is no evidence the stolen personal informatio­n has been misused and no passport details were taken. Customers who had their credit card details accessed were notified last month and those who have had names, emails and travel details stolen will be told within a week.

It is understood the breach affects the person who made the booking rather than co-travellers. It includes bookings made on the airline’s website and app. EasyJet went public with the breach yesterday after a recommenda­tion from the Informatio­n Commission­er’s Office.

The data watchdog is concerned about a rise in online scams during the coronaviru­s crisis and has said all affected EasyJet customers should be made aware as a precaution.

Jake Moore, of cyber security firm ESET, said: ‘This does highlight the need for extra vigilance among the rapid increase of inevitable phishing emails. Many cyber criminals will now jump into the wake of the initial attack and purport to be from EasyJet enticing customers to hand over further details such as passwords or other personal data.

The attack means EasyJet is facing a multi-million pound fine from the ICO at a time when the pandemic has already put it under severe financial pressure. It has grounded the vast majority of its fleet due to the current global travel restrictio­ns and has plans in place to suspend flights until the end of the year if necessary.

The ICO announced last year that it intends to fine British Airways a record £183million after the data of more than 500,000 passengers was compromise­d in a hacking incident. But it included a significan­tly larger number of stolen credit card details. EasyJet boss Johan Lundgren said: ‘We would like to apologise to those customers who have been affected.’

 ??  ?? Stolen: EasyJet details
Stolen: EasyJet details
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom