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On the 7th of September British Airways said the attack affected bookings from 21 August 2018 to 5 September 2018 with credit card details of around 380,000 total customers being compromised. [3] The attackers obtained names, street addresses, email addresses, credit card numbers, expiration dates and card security codes – enough to allow ...
Between 21 August 2018 and 5 September 2018, an attacker stole data for almost 500,000 British Airways customers, including credit card details for 250,000. The company was subsequently fined £20 million in October 2020, by the Information Commissioner's Office, the highest ever fine handed by the ICO at the time of issuing. [235]
In 2018, British Airways had 380,000 card details stolen via this class of attack. [5] A similar attack affected Ticketmaster the same year, with 40,000 customers affected [6] by maliciously injected code on payment pages.
Travellers can earn additional tier points with a British Airways Premium Plus American Express credit card, and by buying sustainable aviation fuel credits. Listen to Simon Calder’s podcast on ...
Freeze your credit: Contact each of the three credit bureaus, Experian, Equifax and TransUnion, and get your credit frozen so a criminal can't open cards or other lines in your name. Credit ...
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British Airways: £183,000,000: UK : Use of poor security arrangements that resulted in a 2018 web skimming attack affecting 500,000 consumers. [24] [25] [26] Was later reduced to £20 million [27] 2020-10-30: Marriott International: £18,400,000: UK : Failure to keep millions of customers’ personal data secure [28] 2019-07-03: Cathay Pacific ...
Chief executive Sean Doyle declared this underlines the carrier’s commitment to recognising the ‘sacrifice and service’ of former military personnel.