Gulf News

Hackers steal 17m Zomato app users’ data

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India’s largest restaurant and food delivery app Zomato announced yesterday that the data of 17 million users had been stolen from its database, including names, email addresses and protected passwords.

The start-up said the “hashed” passwords could not be decrypted but recommende­d users change their login details if they use the same password for other services.

Zomato’s chief technology officer Gunjan Patidar said customers’ financial informatio­n was stored separately from the stolen data and was not compromise­d by the hack.

“No payment informatio­n or credit card data has been stolen/leaked,” he said in a statement on Zomato’s website, adding they were scanning all possible breaches in their system.

“Your credit card informatio­n on Zomato is fully secure, so there’s nothing to worry about there.”

Those affected had been logged out of the website and app and had their passwords changed “as a precaution”, he added.

A report on an online hacker news website carried in local media said the trove of personal data was being auctioned on the dark web for roughly $1,000 (Dh3,670) by a hacker using an alias. The hack of the internatio­nally popular ecommerce start-up comes on the heels of the “WannaCry” cyberattac­k, the world’s biggest ransomware attack to date.

The culprits demanded payment in virtual currency and threatened to delete files on compromise­d computers, which numbered in the hundreds of thousands worldwide. Zomato, which boasts 120 million user visits a month, said it was “plugging any security gaps” and would further enhance its security measures after the database breach.

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