Privacy commissioner launches investigation into Ticketmaster data breach - Action News
Home WebMail Monday, November 25, 2024, 07:53 PM | Calgary | -13.7°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Politics

Privacy commissioner launches investigation into Ticketmaster data breach

Canada's privacy commissionerhas launched an investigation into a cybersecurity breach at Ticketmaster after an attack by ahacker groupsaw the personal information of millions of customers around the world compromised.

Will determine if company was in compliance with Personal Information Protection and Electronic Documents Act

A close-up of a paper ticket to an event.
Privacy Commissioner of Canada Philippe Dufresne has launched an investigation into a cybersecurity breach at Ticketmaster in April and May. The commissioner says the firm holds the personal data of millions of Canadians. (Paul Sakuma/The Associated Press)

Canada's privacy commissionerhas launched an investigation into a cybersecurity breach at Ticketmaster after an attackby ahacker groupcompromised the personal information of millions of customers around the world.

"The investigation will allow us to understand why this cyber incident happened and what must be done to address this situation and prevent it from happening again," Privacy Commissioner of Canada Philippe Dufresne said in a statement Wednesday.

The ticket-selling company wrote in an email to customers in early July that it discovered an "unauthorized third party" had obtained information from a cloud database hosted by a third-party company between April 2 and May 18 ofthis year.

The privacy commissioner's office saidTicketmaster holds the personal information of millions of Canadians.

Theinvestigationwill examine the company's security safeguards and whether it complied with breach notification requirements, the office said. It will also probe whether Ticketmaster was in compliance with thePersonal Information Protection and Electronic Documents Act.

$500,000 US ransom

Earlier this month Ticketmaster told customers by email that the breach "may have included [their] name, basic contact information, and payment card information such as encrypted credit or debit card numbers and expiration dates."

News of the breach came after a hacking group called ShinyHunters claimed it had stolen the user data of more than 500 million Ticketmaster customers and demanded a ransom of $500,000 US ($680,000 Cdn), according to media reports.

Ticketmaster says it first identified the breach on May 20.

With files from the CBC's Kevin Maimann