- Hackers reportedly leaked data of 5 million Qantas customers after failed extortion attempt
- Attackers exploited Salesloft-Salesforce integrations to access and steal customer data
- 44 companies were affected, including Disney, Toyota, McDonald’s, and Vietnam Airlines
Australia’s biggest airline, Qantas, is one of 44 companies whose sensitive customer data ended up on the dark web. Now, numerous cybercriminals have easy access to contact and flight information on millions of people, which they can use for phishing, identity theft, fraud, and other attacks.
Last summer, a group of hackers going by the name Scattered Lapsus$ Hunters broke into Salesforce accounts belonging to hundreds of organizations in different industries – although Salesforce itself was not breached.
The attackers compromised Salesloft accounts that were integrated with Salesforce and exploited the linked API tokens and OAuth connections to pivot into Salesforce environments and exfiltrate customer data.
“Don’t be the next headline”
The group tried to extort Qantas for money, offering to delete the stolen files in exchange. The airline, however, refused to even discuss the matter with the attackers, telling Guardian Australia it “will not engage, negotiate with, or pay any extortion demand”.
In response, Scattered Lapsus$ Hunters released the stolen files on the dark web. The archive includes personal records of 5 million Qantas customers, including people’s names, email addresses, phone numbers, birth dates, and frequent flyer numbers. Credit card details, financial information, and passport details weren’t stolen, it was said.
“Don’t be the next headline, should have paid the ransom,” the group posted on its data leak site.
But apparently, Qantas is not the only company whose data was leaked in this wave. Citing analysts at cybersecurity outfit Intel 471, the Guardian reported that 44 companies were included in the leak, and among them are Gap, Vietnam Airlines, Toyota, Disney, McDonald’s, Ikea, and Adidas.
Scattered Lapsus$ Hunters is a group comprising members of Scattered Spider, Lapsus$, and ShinyHunters. Soon after the Salesloft/Salesforce breach, they announced “going dark”, which the cybersecurity community interpreted as fear of too much publicity. Obviously, it didn’t last long.
Via The Guardian
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