Cathay Pacific is the latest airline to be battered by a major data breach.
In a statement released on its website, the Hong Kong-based international airline said roughly 9.4 million customers had their data accessed, but said there was "no evidence" that the information was misused.
SEE ALSO: Airline gives us a good reason to actually use ARPersonal information such as names of passengers, their nationalities, dates of birth, telephone numbers, email, physical addresses, passport numbers, identity card numbers, and travel history was accessed.
Credit card numbers exposed in the incident were from expired cards, or didn't include CVV information. No passwords were compromised in the breach, and the airline said its flight information systems weren't affected.
Cathay Pacific said it caught wind of suspicious activity on its network back in March, and confirmed that data was accessed in May. The airline said it took the time to figure out whether if the breach had any victims, and is notifying those directly affected by the incident.
It comes a month after British Airways announced that it was hit by a data breach, in which the "personal and financial details" of customers were stolen.
Around 380,000 payment cards had been compromised, according to The Guardian, and the company promised financial compensation for affected customers.
Cathay Pacific has set up a website for customers who believe they have been affected by the data breach.
Copyright © 2023 Powered by
Cathay Pacific hit with data breach involving 9.4 million customers-拍板定案网
sitemap
文章
927
浏览
9
获赞
645
Yes, you can teach your cat to fetch
It's not just dogs who love the art of retrieval. Quite a few cat owners report that their feline frMicrosoft Surface event livestream: How to watch the 2023 event live
You may be wondering, “How do I watch the Microsoft Surface event?” After all, the suddeCreate a Spotify playlist with your Valentine to see your compatibility
The success of a romantic Valentine's Day relies heavily on the quality of music playing in the backMcCarthy as Sisyphus: The 11 best tweets about the House Speaker vote debacle
Somehow, someway, the vote for House Speaker kept becoming more and more of a debacle this week. WeApple's latest iOS will let you disable the FaceTime asymmetric grid
Hallelujah, FaceTime sanity is coming.Apple released the beta version of iOS 13.5 to registered deveMcCarthy as Sisyphus: The 11 best tweets about the House Speaker vote debacle
Somehow, someway, the vote for House Speaker kept becoming more and more of a debacle this week. WeTinder rolls out Relationship Types and pronouns features
On the heels of releasing its new Relationship Goals feature, Tinder is now rolling out a couple morTikTok's 'bold glamour' filter: What it is and how to get it
Lots of filters online are designed to zhuzh up your look. But a filter going viral on TikTok is difHow to watch Apple's WWDC 2020 event
Remember tech events? They're back!Sort of, anyway. Apple's annual Worldwide Developers Conference (Musk's X seizes @Music handle. Owner is understandably upset
Less than a week after X snatched the "@X" handle from a user, it has reclaimed "@Music," too. For tAmazon Labor Day Sale 2023: Savings still around on MacBooks, Fire TVs and tablets, more
UPDATE: Sep. 5, 2023, 1:00 p.m. EDT This post has been updated to reflect current sale pricing at AmWhat is compassion fatigue? Caregivers explain.
Sandy Bruno, youth and family coordinator at Comfort Zone Camp, a national nonprofit bereavement camGoogle says no to Zoom
Zoom, the videoconferencing software that people seem to alternately love and hate these days, is noIs Starbucks food actually good? The 10 best tweets of the week
Wikipedia, cold weather, and Starbucks food: All things addressed this week on Twitter. How about thSing, hum or say 'Happy Birthday' to any Google product. Wait for a cute surprise.
Happy birthday, Google! Thanks for the doodles!A quarter of a century ago, American computer scienti