Paddy Power is contacting 649,055 of its customers, after the online betting firm admitted this week that its customer database was compromised in a “historical data breach.”
In fact, the breach was so “historic” that it actually took place way back in 2010, but has now only been publicly admitted to.
Paddy Power admitted the breach more than fours year after it happened, in a statement on its website.
It said that it had only become aware of the full extent of the 2010 breach in “recent months” (in May), when it took legal action in Canada in conjunction with the Ontario Provincial Police to retrieve the compromised dataset from an individual.
However, it is seems that customer names, usernames, addresses, email addresses, phone contact number, date of birth and prompted question and answer details were compromised. So everything needed for identity theft, or for the creation of personalised phishing emails.
The firm said it had tightened up its security with a £4m investment in IT security systems in recent years. It said it took its responsibilities regarding customer data extremely seriously and had kept the Irish Office of the Data Protection Commissioner updated.
“We sincerely regret that this breach occurred and we apologise to people who have been inconvenienced as a result,” said Peter O’Donovan, MD Online, Paddy Power. “We take our responsibilities regarding customer data extremely seriously and have conducted an extensive investigation into the breach and the recovered data.
“That investigation shows that there is no evidence that any customer accounts have been adversely impacted by this breach,” O’Donovan. “We are communicating with all of the people whose details have been compromised to tell them what has happened.”
Online gambling has become increasingly important to bookmakers in recent years.
Even Facebook has had the odd flutter, when it launched its first ever cash gambling app – Bingo Friendzy, back in 2012.
Are you a security pro? Try our quiz!
Tesla retreats from pioneering gigacasting manufacturing process, amid cost cutting and challenges at EV giant
No skynet please. After the US, UK and France pledge human only control of nuclear…
Microsoft's AI investments continue in south east Asia, after investments in Japan, Malaysia, Indonesia, as…
New chapter for LastPass as it becomes an independent company to focus on cybersecurity, after…
US FCC seeks to ban Chinese telecom firms at centre of national security concerns from…
Two updates to Anthropic's AI chatbot Claude sees arrival of a new business-focused plan, as…