Ticketmaster Data Hack Hits Half a Billion Customers: What to Do
Ticketmaster Data Hack Hits Half a Billion Customers: What to Do"
- Select a language for the TTS:
- UK English Female
- UK English Male
- US English Female
- US English Male
- Australian Female
- Australian Male
- Language selected: (auto detect) - EN
Play all audios:
AARP (source: Getty Images (2), NurPhoto via AP Newsroom (1)) Facebook Twitter LinkedIn In this story Personal information imperiled • Hackers brag • Assume the worst • Fight back
Your name, address, credit card, email and other personally identifiable information may have been exposed if you bought tickets online to a concert, Broadway show or sporting event through
Ticketmaster.
On May 31, Ticketmaster’s parent company, Live Nation Entertainment, revealed in an 8-K filing with the federal Securities and Exchange Commission that about a week and a half earlier, it
had discovered unauthorized activity regarding Ticketmaster data. A public company files an 8-K when an unexpected major event occurs of interest to shareholders and investors.
Live Nation’s investigation found that the data was for sale on the dark web, the secretive corridors of the internet where criminals barter illegally obtained consumer information.
Hacker group claims to be responsible
The regulatory filing appears to confirm claims from a hacker group known as ShinyHunters that it was responsible for the theft, which reportedly amounted to 1.3 terabytes of personally
identifiable information on 560 million Ticketmaster customers. The stolen data was said to carry a one-time price of $500,000.
ShinyHunters may also be behind a recent data breach at Santander Bank, based in Spain but with branches in Florida and eight mid-Atlantic and New England states. Data from some 30 million
bank customers was exposed as part of that hack.
Other reports suggest that the cyberattacks may have been launched against a cloud-hosting provider named Snowflake that large companies use to store mountains of data. In the SEC filing,
Live Nation-Ticketmaster didn’t mention Snowflake.
Nor did Snowflake mention Live Nation-Ticketmaster in a blog post that read in part, “We have not identified evidence suggesting this activity was caused by a vulnerability, misconfiguration
or breach of Snowflake’s platform.” But it also acknowledged, “We did find evidence that a threat actor obtained personal credentials to and accessed demo accounts belonging to a former
Snowflake employee. It did not contain sensitive data.”
Assume the worst about your data“I think it is fair to assume that your info has been exposed from at least one of these mega-breaches we’ve had in recent years,” says Odysseas Papadimitriou, chief executive of the
WalletHub mobile app and personal finance site. “The Ticketmaster breach is not only the latest, it’s a huge one.”
Trending News
Pursuit of love: who is in the cast and when is it on? Everything we know about the new bbc dramaThe first episode of the BBC’s new romantic adventure, The Pursuit Of Love, is set to hit our screens It airs at 9:00pm ...
What is the point of labour if starmer won’t scrap cruel tory policies? — scottish national partyStarmer and his Tory-tribute act talk a big game about change – but only the SNP are serious about delivering it. In an ...
Winners and losers at the 2025 baftas | thearticleThe main problem with the BAFTAs, which took place this week, is that, too often, they give too many awards to mediocre ...
Video 'Big Little Lies' star Laura Dern teases possible return to 'Jurassic Park' - ABC NewsABC NewsVideoLiveShowsShopStream on'Diddy' trial LatestLatestIsraeli Embassy workers killed San Diego plane crash Taylor...
Emmys: comedy series director handicap__ Ray Richmond is contributing to Deadline’s Emmy coverage. Here’s his scorecard assessing the Outstanding Comedy Serie...
Latests News
Ticketmaster Data Hack Hits Half a Billion Customers: What to DoAARP (source: Getty Images (2), NurPhoto via AP Newsroom (1)) Facebook Twitter LinkedIn In this story Personal informati...
Rachael ray & intentional content team to launch free food studios production companyEXCLUSIVE: Rachael Ray is expanding her purview with the launch of her own production studio. The author, TV host and ph...
England | FourFourTwoTurf Moor’s first taste of European football in 51 years ended in celebration rather than sour grapes, as goals from Bur...
How china is redrawing the map of world scienceOn a freezing November morning, Ashraf Islam is 3,000 kilometres from his family in balmy Bangladesh, but the weather is...
Chipotle ceo steps down after health scares and falling salesChipotle CEO Steve Ells is stepping down amid food safety scandals, low sales, and, presumably, charging a premium for g...