[Updated (2018-04-06 22:18 UTC): According to a report at c|net, the breach also affected: Sears, Kmart, and now Best Buy, too. --martyb]
Delta Says Data Exposed for 'Several Hundred Thousand' Customers
Delta Air Lines Inc. said a cyber attack on a contractor potentially exposed the payment information of "several hundred thousand customers."
A data breach from Sept. 26 to Oct. 12 at a company called [24]7.ai allowed unauthorized access to customers' names, address, payment-card information, CVV numbers and expiration dates, Delta said in a statement Thursday. The vendor, which provides online chat services to Delta, notified the carrier and other clients last week.
[...] Delta said it wasn't yet able to say how many customers actually had their data stolen. The information was at risk if a customer entered data manually online to complete a payment transaction, Delta said. Data from customers who used a program called Delta Wallet weren't compromised.
Delta statement and response website.
Also at The Verge.
(Score: 5, Insightful) by Virindi on Friday April 06 2018, @06:07PM (5 children)
What is the endgame here? These "data breaches" seem to be accelerating, and bigco and their customers seem to care less and less when they happen ("that's just the status quo"). How is this trend going to go into the future?
Do "data breaches" actually matter? Or are banks just getting good enough at reissuing cards etc that it will just have minor consequence?
I note that they didn't mention SSNs being leaked here. But it seems to me that something has to give when it comes to identity verification, like with respect to getting loans or filing taxes. A situation where tens to hundreds of thousands of people are getting scammed cannot continue without demands for fixing the system. It seems like some kind of tightened identity verification is the next logical step.
Of course, the cynical would say that the masters of the universe will use this crisis to further lock every citizen into some kind of identity 'card' to better track the population. Perhaps something biometric?
(Score: 3, Interesting) by c0lo on Friday April 06 2018, @06:48PM (2 children)
They'll certainly stop when Trump's tax records will be breached.
Now, that's an idea... how hard can it be?
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aoFiw2jMy-0 https://soylentnews.org/~MichaelDavidCrawford
(Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Friday April 06 2018, @11:08PM (1 child)
Maybe the left can embarrass themselves again. http://www.breitbart.com/big-journalism/2017/03/14/epic-fail-rachel-maddow-mocked-after-dragging-out-trump-tax-scoop/ [breitbart.com]
I remember the 'watch parties' for it. It was amazing how everyone sat around with baited breath hopping the fail they were promised would occur before their eyes. Instead he paid more in 1 year than the other candidates put together for their lifetimes.
(Score: 2) by c0lo on Saturday April 07 2018, @12:24AM
Must have been an awful smell around, everybody exhaling an odour of fishing bait. Halitosis, I think is called, yeah?
. [lascribe.net]
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aoFiw2jMy-0 https://soylentnews.org/~MichaelDavidCrawford
(Score: 3, Insightful) by Thexalon on Friday April 06 2018, @09:52PM
It depends on who you're asking.
Do they matter to the people whose data was breached? Yup, they do, because it means they could have lost a bunch of money without realizing it, and/or had their identity stolen. That second one in particular cannot be fixed by re-issuing a credit card, nor by offering identity protection insurance for a particular length of time (because the thieves can always use the data after the length of time is up).
Do they matter to the company who goofed and lost the data? Not really. And here's your proof [yahoo.com]: As soon as the noise dies down and a likely-innocent junior-level scapegoat is punished, everything is business as usual. That's why companies who experience breaches treat the situation first and foremost as a public relations problem, not a technical problem.
The only thing that stops a bad guy with a compiler is a good guy with a compiler.
(Score: 2, Interesting) by Anonymous Coward on Saturday April 07 2018, @12:14AM
> I note that they didn't mention SSNs being leaked here.
Is there even a need for that anymore? They can just correlate it with the Equifax data, which AFAIK already contains SSNs for almost the entire adult population of the US. At this point, leaking SSNs is kind of redundant. Maybe the data set even had them, but the hackers just weren't interested :)