KFC Website Hack Leaks Customer Data

Hackers have broken into the data of KFC’s Colonel’s Club loyalty scheme after breaching the fast food chain’s website, potentially granting access to the information of 1.2 million members.

KFC alerted its customers to the hack and prompted them to reset their account credentials, particularly if they are used with other services, even though the company does not believe a high number of its customers have been impacted.

“Our monitoring systems have found a small number of Colonel’s Club accounts may have been compromised as a result of our website being targeted,” the fried-chicken joint said.

“Whilst it’s unlikely you have been impacted, we advise that you change your password as a precaution.”

Zinger of a hack

The company more versed with producing ‘finger-lickin’ good’ yet riotously unhealthy fried chicken, said it is taking action to tackle such online threats and will be introducing additional security measures to safeguard its customers’ accounts and “stop this kind of thing happening again”.

Such a response is notable as more tech-related companies such as Yahoo have arguably been slow to respond to major data breaches they have suffered. The transparency of the company is also positive in comparison to the less open activities of other firms that have suffered breaches at the hands of hackers and cyber criminals.

KFC also told ITV News that is does not store any payment information belonging to its customers, so they can rest easy knowing that their financial details are not at risk.

“We don’t store credit card details as part of our Colonel’s Club rewards scheme, so no financial data was compromised,” said Brad Scheiner, head of IT at KFC UK & Ireland, who said 30 of its 1.2 million members had been targeted by the hack.

It would appear that the knock-on effects of KFC’s hack will not be significant, unlike the Yahoo data breach which encroached upon the operations of both Sky and BT.

And such hacks seem to be on the rise, so much so that we have a rundown of the top 10 most significant hacks in recent years.

How well do you know network security? Try our quiz and find out!

Roland Moore-Colyer

As News Editor of Silicon UK, Roland keeps a keen eye on the daily tech news coverage for the site, while also focusing on stories around cyber security, public sector IT, innovation, AI, and gadgets.

Recent Posts

Alphabet Value Surges Over $2tn On Dividend Plan

Google parent Alphabet sees market capitalisation surge over $2tn on plan to over first-ever cash…

59 mins ago

Google Asks US Court To Dismiss Federal Adtech Case

Google asks Virginia federal court to dismiss case brought by US Justice Department and eight…

1 hour ago

Snap Sees Surge In Users, Ad Revenues

Snapchat parent Snap reports user growth, revenues in spite of tough competition, in what may…

2 hours ago

Intel Shares Sink As AI Surge Hits Chip Revenue

Intel shares sag after company shares gloomy revenue predictions, as data centre chip demand hit…

3 hours ago

Email Provider Complains To EU Over Reduced Google Rankings

Germany's Tuta Mail says Google broke EU's new DMA rules with March algorithm update that…

3 hours ago

US Regulator Probes Effectiveness Of Tesla Autopilot Recall

US auto safety regulator opens new investigation into adequacy of Tesla Autopilot recall, saying it…

4 hours ago