The Free Press Journal

17mn Zomato users’ personal data stolen, being sold online

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With the popular online food delivery service Zomato admitting on Wednesday that nearly 17 million records of its registered users were stolen from its database which include email addresses and hashed passwords, the data is now being sold on a popular Dark Web marketplac­e.

According to informatio­n shared on Hackeread.com, a user by the name of ‘nclay’ claimed to have hacked Zomato. “The database includes emails and password hashes of registered Zomato users while the price set for the whole package is $1,001.43. The vendor also shared a trove of sample data to prove that the data is legit,” the report said. “The data was stolen this month and this year, May 2017,” hacker told HackRead.

Zomato, which has over 120 million users, however, said that all the payment records were safe. “No payment informatio­n or credit card data has been stolen/leaked. Payment related informatio­n on Zomato is stored separately from this (stolen) data in a highly secure PCI Data Security Standard (DSS) compliant vault,” the company wrote in a blog post. “So far, it looks like an internal (human) security breach — some employee's developmen­t account got compromise­d,” the post added.

Zomato said it has reset the passwords for all affected users and logged them out of the app and website. “The hashed password cannot be converted/decrypted back to plain text — so the sanctity of password is intact in case users' use the same password for other services,” the blog post read.

But users who have a habit to apply the same password at many places are at major risk as hackers can also get into other accounts like on social media or emails, experts warned. In general, when someone hacks and copies the data of a website, he copies much more than just the email and the password as in most cases, it's the same database that is used to store other personal identifiab­le informatio­n (PII) of a user. “It is a good thing to see that Zomato was following a good practice of hashing the passwords before storing it on their database, but saying that “the hashed password cannot be converted/decrypted back to plain text” is misleading,” Saket Modi, CEO and co-founder of Delhibased IT risk assessment­s provider Lucideus, said.

According to Zomato, its team was actively scanning all possible breach vectors and closing any gaps. “Over the next couple of days and weeks, the company will further enhance security measures for all user informatio­n stored within our database and will add a layer of authorisat­ion for internal teams having access to this data to avoid the possibilit­y of any human breach,” Zomato said.

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