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Showing posts with label Mobile App Breach. Show all posts

Millions of People's 'Intimate' Location Data Compromised in Apparent Hack

 

Major apps worldwide are potentially being exploited by rogue members within the advertising sector to collect sensitive location data extensively, which subsequently is transferred to a location data firm whose subsidiary has previously sold global location data to US law enforcement agencies. 

The thousands of apps discovered in hacked files from location data firm Gravy Analytics range from games like Candy Crush to dating apps like Tinder, pregnancy tracking, and religious prayer apps for both Android and iOS. Because much of the data collection occurs through the advertising ecosystem rather than code developed by app creators themselves, it is likely that users or even app developers are unaware of it. 

After examining some of the data, Zach Edwards, senior threat analyst at cybersecurity firm Silent Push and an avid follower of the location data space, tells 404 Media, "For the first time publicly, we seem to have proof that one of the largest data brokers selling to both commercial and government clients appears to be acquiring their data from the online advertising bid stream," instead of code embedded in the apps themselves. 

The data offers a rare peek into the realm of real-time bidding. Historically, location data providers compensated app developers to incorporate bundles of code that collected their users' location data. Numerous companies have instead moved to the advertising ecosystem, where firms bid to place ads within apps, to obtain location information. However, data brokers can listen in on that procedure and gather the location of people's mobile phones.

"This is a nightmare scenario for privacy, because not only does this data breach contain data scraped from the RTB systems, but there's some company out there acting like a global honey badger, doing whatever it pleases with every piece of data that comes its way," Edwards added. 

The hacked Gravy data includes tens of millions of mobile phone coordinates from devices in the United States, Russia, and Europe. Some of those files additionally list an app next to each piece of location data. 404 Media extracted the app names and created a list of mentioned apps. 

The list includes dating sites Tinder and Grindr; massive games like Candy Crush, Temple Run, Subway Surfers, and Harry Potter: Puzzles & Spells; transit app Moovit; My Period Calendar & Tracker, a period-tracking app with over 10 million downloads; popular fitness app MyFitnessPal; social network Tumblr; Yahoo's email client; Microsoft's 365 office app; and flight tracker Flightradar24. The list also includes a number of religious-focused apps, such as Muslim prayer and Christian Bible apps, as well as numerous pregnancy trackers and VPN apps, which some users may download, ironically, in order to safeguard their privacy.

Thousands of Users Impacted in Revolut Data Breach

 

Financial technology firm Revolut has suffered a massive data breach that may have allowed hackers to access the private details of over 50,000 users. 

The fintech giant, which has a banking license in Lithuania, described the assault as “highly targeted” and stated the hacker only had access to 0.16% of customers’ data for a “short period” of time. 

“We immediately identified and isolated the attack to effectively limit its impact and have contacted those customers affected. Customers who have not received an email have not been impacted,” Revolut spokesperson Michael Bodansky explained. To be clear, no funds have been accessed or stolen. Our customers’ money is safe – as it has always been. All customers can continue to use their cards and accounts as normal.”  

However, according to Revolut’s breach disclosure to the authorities in Lithuania, the firm says nearly 50,150 global customers, including 20,687 in the European Economic Area (EEA) and 379 Lithuanian citizens, may have been impacted by the data breach. The leaked data includes names, postal and email addresses, telephone numbers, partial card details, and bank account information.  

Soon after the attack, multiple Revolut users complained regarding obscene texts received via the application’s chat feature. Some customers also reported getting text messages directed to a Revolut phishing website. It’s unclear if these events are related to the breach. 

In its data breach notification to affected users, Revolut warned impacted users to be on high alert for follow-on phishing and fraud scams using leaked details. 

“Cyber-criminals are constantly looking for ways to make money at your expense and try to exploit human emotions in order to extract the information they need directly from you using social engineering techniques. Scammers usually follow the same principle – they try to force you to take actions without thinking about them after starting an emotional conversation,” the company warned users. 

“Malicious persons and fraudsters may try, using the publicized information about this breach of personal data security, to trick you with various login or other important personal data, offer some fictitious services and ask you to pay for them.” 

According to Forbes, London-based Revolut is UK’s most valuable fintech startup currently valued at $33 billion. It has over 20 million customers in 200 nations but is most popular in Europe and the UK. The app-based bank was established in 2015 by Russia-born Nikolay Storonsky and Ukraine-born Vlad Yatsenko.