British Airways website suffers data breach; 380,000 payments affected
(Reuters) - Financial data has been stolen from potentially hundreds of thousands of British Airways customers who made online bookings in recent weeks, extending a run of embarrassing technological mishaps suffered by the UK flag carrier.
FILE PHOTO: A British Airways airplane taxis at City Airport in London, Britain, September 3, 2018. REUTERS/Hannah McKay/File Photo
The thefts occurred during a data breach that affected bookings made on the airline’s website between Aug. 21 and Sept. 5, parent International Airlines Group (ICAG.L) said on Thursday.
FILE PHOTO: British Airways logos are seen on tail fins at Heathrow Airport in west London, Britain, February 23, 2018. REUTERS/Hannah McKay
Around 380,000 card payments were “compromised”, it said.
In May 2017, the carrier suffered a massive computer system failure caused by a power supply issue near London’s Heathrow, which stranded 75,000 customers at Europe’s busiest airport over a holiday weekend.
Its chief executive said at the time it would take steps to ensure such an incident never happened again, but in July it was forced to cancel and delay flights out of the same airport due to problems with a supplier’s IT systems.
IAG said the data breach had been resolved and the website was working normally, and that no travel or passport details were stolen.
It was communicating with affected customers but advised any others who believed they might have been affected to contact their banks or credit card providers.
The airline had launched an investigation and notified police and other relevant authorities.
Reporting by Sangameswaran S and Rama Venkat Raman in Bengaluru; Editing by John Stonestreet
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