National Post (National Edition)

McDonald’s Canada job website hacked

Info of 95,000 applicants compromise­d

- The Canadian Press

TORONTO • McDonald’s Canada says the jobs section of its website has been hacked, compromisi­ng the personal informatio­n of about 95,000 applicants over the last three years.

The company said Friday the accessed informatio­n included names, addresses, phone numbers, employment histories and other standard job applicatio­n informatio­n of those who applied online between March 2014 and March 2017.

The site doesn’t collect social insurance numbers, banking informatio­n or health informatio­n, McDonald’s said.

“At this time, we have no informatio­n that the informatio­n taken has been misused,” the company said in a statement. “We apologize to those impacted by this incident.”

Ira Nishisato, partner and national leader of cyber-security and cyber risk-management at the law firm Borden Ladner Gervais LLP in Toronto, said it’s usually unclear how personal data will be used in the early stages of a security breach.

“When large scale data breaches occur you have a tip of the iceberg phenomenon,” he said. “You’re aware certain informatio­n may have been compromise­d but you’re typically not aware of the full extent of the breach or of what use that informatio­n may have been put to.”

Nishisato said there is a black market for personal informatio­n on the so-called dark web, a part of the Internet not easily publicly available and largely unregulate­d.

“Hackers who are able to penetrate systems through data breaches will resell personal informatio­n for considerab­le amounts of money,” he said. “That can lead to identity theft and other illegal activity.”

An increasing number of class action lawsuits stemming from data breaches has prompted organizati­ons to take preventive steps against potential cyber attacks, Nishisato said.

“When it comes to a data breach, it’s not an if it’s a when,” he said. “It’s fair to say you can never be 100 per cent cyber-secure. But there is a great deal you can do you limit your exposure and liability from a legal perspectiv­e.”

A McDonald’s Canada spokesman said it appears the breach occurred in midMarch.

Adam Grachnik said McDonald’s has notified every provincial and territoria­l privacy commission­er as well as the Office of the Privacy Commission­er of Canada of the breach.

A spokeswoma­n for the federal privacy watchdog said the office is aware of the website breach.

“We’re following up with the organizati­on with respect to what took place and what the company is doing to mitigate the situation,” Anne-Marie Cenaiko said in an email. “The company has submitted a breach report, which we will be reviewing.

The company said all applicants directly affected by the privacy breach would be notified by mail, or through other contact informatio­n, such as email or phone, if a mailing address wasn’t on the applicatio­n form.

McDonald’s also said applicants affected by the breach could call the company’s dedicated assistance line.

McDonald’s said the site was shut down immediatel­y and an investigat­ion was launched when they learned of the breach.

“The careers webpage will remain shut down until the investigat­ion is complete and appropriat­e measures are taken to ensure that this type of security breach does not happen again,” McDonald’s said.

It is advising anybody interested in applying for a job to do so in person at any McDonald’s Canada restaurant.

McDonald’s has more than 1,400 restaurant­s in Canada and more than 80,000 Canadian employees. McDonald’s said its website was shut down immediatel­y and an investigat­ion was launched when it learned of a breach.

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