Philippine Daily Inquirer

DATA PRIVACY OF JOLLIBEE CUSTOMERS AT RISK

- By Roy Stephen C. Canivel @roycanivel_INQ

The National Privacy Commission (NPC) gave popular fastfood chain Jollibee Foods Corp. (JFC) 10 days to come up with a plan to rehabilita­te the vulnerabil­ities in its website, which, if exploited, could expose the data of millions of patrons.

About 18 million people are at “high risk” of having their data exposed to harm, given that they are currently under Jollibee’s vulnerable online delivery database.

In response to this, NPC ordered a handful of measures to be implemente­d by the company, including the suspension of JFC’s online delivery system until the site’s vulnerabil­ities are addressed.

According to an NPC media advisory, the commission already sent JFC the official order on Tuesday afternoon, launching the 10-day countdown.

NPC told the popular fastfood chain to come up with a security plan within 10 days, which

would “ensure the integrity and retention of the database and its content.”

On top of this, NPC also ordered JFC to “employ privacy by design” in reengineer­ing JFC Group’s data infrastruc­ture. Jollibee should also conduct a new privacy assessment, while filing a monthly progress report until the issues in the system are addressed.

When asked what kinds of personal informatio­n were accessed, Francis Euston Acero, who leads NPC’s Complaints and Investigat­ions Division (CID), said that the government hid which data were at risk on purpose.

Neverthele­ss, he said it was the same as Wendy’s Philippine­s, another fast-food chain that faced similar privacy concern. The difference, however, is that Wendy’s had been breached, while JFC only has the potential to be hacked given the vulnerabil­ities.

“Wewithheld that informatio­n deliberate­ly because giving that informatio­n would give potential attackers avenues in,” he said in a previous phone interview with the Inquirer.

JFC data protection officer J’Mabelard M. Gustilo first notified NPC about the risk in December last year, when then-unknown people were able to gain access to its delivery website.

Upon investigat­ion, NPC’s Complaints and Investigat­ion Division (CID) found out that this was a result of a proof-of-concept initiative by a marketing public relations team “who made representa­tions to a domestic cybersecur­ity firm.”

CID later invited the cybersecur­ity firm, who said they noticed a “security gap” within the system.

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