Waterloo Region Record

PC Plus users told to beef up passwords after breach

- Aleksandra Sagan

TORONTO — Loblaw is warning PC Plus rewards collectors to beef up their passwords after points were stolen from some members’ accounts.

“We are treating this as a breach as individual member accounts were accessed and points were stolen,” said Kevin Groh, the company’s vice-president of corporate affairs and communicat­ion, in a statement.

Meanwhile, Global News reported that Canadian Tire shut down customer access to online accounts this week in the interests of protecting their personal informatio­n.

“We recently noticed unusual traffic on our website and suspended customer sign-in capabiliti­es while we investigat­e,” communicat­ions manager Stephanie Nadalin told Global, which said that it had been alerted to the problem by an unnamed Canadian Tire customer.

Those trying for access to their points and credit card informatio­n on their computers instead saw a message saying that the sign-in option was “temporaril­y unavailabl­e” and the company was working on the problem.

Groh said the Loblaw breach stems from people using favourite or weak

username and password combinatio­ns across multiple sites.

These combinatio­ns were stolen from other sites and used to access PC Plus accounts, according to Groh.

In an email to PC Plus members sent late last month, Loblaw pointed to sites like Yahoo and LinkedIn, which were both hacked in recent years.

Last year, LinkedIn said a 2012 security breach compromise­d more than 100 million user passwords. It was previously believed only 6.5 million passwords were implicated.

Also last year, Yahoo said the personal informatio­n of more than one billion of its users was stolen during a 2013 breach.

Loblaw said the company is unable to disclose how many accounts lost points as it is continuing to work with any members whose points were taken to reinstate them.

The company emailed all PC Plus members late last month, urging them to update their passwords.

It asked members to create unique passwords that are a combinatio­n of letters, numbers and characters, and to change them frequently.

Loblaw also notified law enforcemen­t, Groh said.

Groh said Loblaw’s IT security team is monitoring unusual activity and is investigat­ing any possibilit­y of underlying IT vulnerabil­ities.

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