Categories: SecurityWorkspace

Back-Up Supplier Acronis Apologises For Data Leak

Back-up vendor Acronis has admitted some of its customers’ data leaked onto the Web, as it opens an investigation into what went wrong.

Acronis said certain information from its knowledge base was opened up to everyone after the access control settings were reset to default. The back-up supplier said most of the content in the database was not “sensitive or confidential”.

“However, it did contain an older spreadsheet listing just the email addresses of customers who had been entitled to a free product upgrade and their upgrade license key. In compliance with our customer information security policies, no other identifying information was contained in this spreadsheet,” explained Ed Benack, chief customer officer at Acronis, in an email sent to TechWeekEurope.

“The rights issues were addressed immediately, and we are still investigating why this occurred in the first place. In addition, we have updated our policy and moved all internal files to a completely separate database to further protect customer information, should another unexpected software glitch occur. This glitch did not occur in an Acronis product.”

Acronis makes amends

The company has now offered affected customers another free product upgrade on top of the one they were already due.

In an email to customers, spotted by DaniWeb, Acronis blamed the data breach on a “technical issue” with one of its servers. The vendor warned customers that their email addresses “could have been looked up on the Internet by directly searching for it”.

There have been a number of high-profile database leaks this year. LinkedIn saw a database containing 6.5 million passwords stolen, and it is now facing legal action as a result.

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Thomas Brewster

Tom Brewster is TechWeek Europe's Security Correspondent. He has also been named BT Information Security Journalist of the Year in 2012 and 2013.

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