Uber has suffered a significant data breach, with the New York Timesreporting the rideshare company took several of its internal systems offline on Thursday while attempting to assess the damage.
It's currently unclear how many people were impacted by the security breach, whether they were customers or employees, or specifically what information was compromised. However, it reportedly prompted Uber to instruct employees not to use the company's Slack, and to disable some engineering systems.
In a statement to Mashable, Uber acknowledged that it is "currently responding to a cybersecurity incident" and has contacted law enforcement, but declined to comment further at this time.
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
It's also currently unclear exactly how long Uber's computer network was compromised. Uber allegedly only became aware of the security breach on Thursday afternoon after employees were explicitly notified by the hacker themselves. Had they not done so, it's possible they could have remained undetected.
"I announce I am a hacker and Uber has suffered a data breach," the hacker wrote in a message sent via an employee's compromised Slack account.
The message included a list of internal databases the hacker claimed to have accessed, with at least some of their claims proven by an explicit photo reportedly left on an internal employee information page.
SEE ALSO: 5 damning revelations from the Uber Files
Data breaches are an unfortunate constant in our digitised world, with a new one seemingly announced every week. As such, how companies respond to these breaches is incredibly important — and Uber's history has been less than stellar.
In 2016, Uber was the subject of an enormous, high-profile data breach which impacted 57 million people throughout the globe. However, rather than immediately disclosing this breach, the company opted to cover it up, paying a $100,000 ransom to the hackers so they'd delete the compromised data. Uber's then-Chief Security Officer Joe Sullivan was fired over the incident and is currently facing criminal charges, with all these details only coming to light due to legal obligations.
Uber's executive team has seen other significant changes since this incident as well, with current CEO Dara Khosrowshahi succeeding founder Travis Kalanick in 2017. Hopefully this combined with the lessons learned in 2016 have at least improved the company's security response.
Copyright © 2023 Powered by
Uber's had a data breach, and we don't know how bad it is yet-粲然可观网
sitemap
文章
51
浏览
3
获赞
93
Astrology tech can provide a safe space for the LGBTQ community, but there are limitations
Mashable is celebrating Pride Monthby exploring the modern LGBTQ world, from the people who make upDownload this: 'Tiny Bubbles' is the puzzle game your weekend needs
Can a game about popping multi-colored bubbles be relaxing?That's the premise of Tiny Bubbles, a newA dinosaur picked a fight with the dictionary on Twitter and it was brutal
Today in weird things that happen on the internet, a dinosaur picked a random fight with a dictionarA woman at E3 + a dead phone + Reddit = absolute chaos
For all the good Reddit can do, it can make an enormous mess of things, and then it can react badlyDavid Harbour recreated THAT scene from 'The Shining' and it's frankly terrifying
All work and no play makes David Harbour the terrifying star of his own version of The Shining.The SThe rainbow armpit hair trend has finally arrived
St. Louis-based hairstylist Caitlin Ford, or caitlinfordhair on Instagram, has upped the ante on thePopular Chinese lesbian dating app, Rela, suddenly goes offline
Rela (热拉), a popular lesbian dating app from China, has suddenly gone dark.People areTrump just added 4 million new soldiers to his Twitter bot army, and we didn't even notice
Forget what you've heard about Donald Trump's declining popularity from the #FakeNewsMedia. The presHow to fix missing data and battery drain in Apple's iOS 14, WatchOS 7
If you've been struggling with a fresh set of technical issues since the mid-September launch of iOSChina now has a one
After China's lifting of its longstanding one-child policy, it's started to put in a one-dog policy.Americans have slower mobile internet speed than Estonia
Land of the free home of the...buffering... brave. U.S. mobile speeds lag behind those found in otheThe rainbow armpit hair trend has finally arrived
St. Louis-based hairstylist Caitlin Ford, or caitlinfordhair on Instagram, has upped the ante on thePortland bans facial recognition tech, despite Amazon's lobbying
The city of Portland just took the fight against facial recognition up a notch. Late Wednesday afterTerrifying 'Dolphin Attack' can secretly hijack your smart speaker
As if we needed more reasons to be freaked out by increasingly powerful digital assistants, there'sGoogle celebrates Meghan and Harry's wedding with stunning Doodle
All eyes are on the royal bride and groom today, as Prince Harry and Meghan Markle get ready to walk