The Manila Times

Hackers stole data from 57 million Uber users

- AFP

SAN FRANCISCO: Uber said on Tuesday that hackers compromise­d personal data from some 57 million riders and drivers in a breach kept hidden for a year.

“None of this should have happened, and I will not make excuses for it,” said a statement from chief executive Dara Khosrowsha­hi, who took over at the ridesharin­g giant in August.

Two members of the Uber informatio­n security team who “led the response” that included not alerting users that their data was breached were let go from the San Franciscob­ased company effective Tuesday, according to Khosrowsha­hi.

The Uber chief said he only recently learned that outsiders had broken into a cloud-based server used by the company for data and down

and mobile phone numbers for riders, and the names and driver license informatio­n of some 600,000 drivers, according to Uber.

Uber paid the hackers $100,000 to destroy the data, not telling riders or drivers whose informatio­n was at risk, according to a source familiar with the situation.

Co-founder and ousted chief Travis Kalanick was advised of the breach shortly after it was discovered, but it was not made public until Uber’s new boss Khosrowsha­hi learned of the incident.

“You may be just talking about Khosrowsha­hi said.

“I had the same question, so I immediatel­y asked for a thorough investigat­ion of what happened and how we handled it.”

Khosrowsha­hi said that what he learned about Uber’s failure to notify users or regulators prompted corrective actions.

Uber is notifying drivers whose license numbers were swiped, and offering them credit and identity theft protection­s.

The company also said it is notifying regulators, and monitoring affected rider accounts for signs of fraud. asking why we are this now, a year later,”

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