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Security Communications Privacy The Internet

Hacker Steals 17 Million Zomato Users' Data, Briefly Puts It On Dark Web (hackread.com) 32

Waqas reports via Hack Read: Recently, HackRead found out a vendor going by the online handle of âoenclayâ is claiming to have hacked Zomato and selling the data of its 17 million registered users on a popular Dark Web marketplace. The database includes emails and password hashes of registered Zomato users while the price set for the whole package is USD 1,001.43 (BTC 0.5587). The vendor also shared a trove of sample data to prove that the data is legit. Here's a screenshot of the sample data publicly shared by "nclay." Upon testing the sample data on Zomato.com's login page, it was discovered that each and every account mentioned in the list exists on Zomato. Although Zomato didn't reply to our email but in their latest blog post the company has acknowledged the breach. Here's a full preview of the blog post published by Zomato 7hours ago: "Over 120 million users visit Zomato every month. What binds all of these varied individuals is the desire to enjoy the best a city has to offer, in terms of food. When Zomato users trust us with their personal information, they naturally expect the information to be safeguarded. And that's something we do diligently, without fail. We take cyber security very seriously -- if you've been a regular at Zomato for years, you'd agree."
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Hacker Steals 17 Million Zomato Users' Data, Briefly Puts It On Dark Web

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  • by Anonymous Coward on Thursday May 18, 2017 @07:33PM (#54445841)

    What the fuck is zomato?

    • basically trying to ape Yelp. I had never heard of it either until they bought the excellent Urbanspoon and it ceased to exist with a massive drop in quality in the Zomato husk which remained.

      They would have menus/reviews from locals/restaurants by locale and known names. It has some of those things still just very poorly done compared to what I loved about Urbanspoon. I'm assuming they bought out other competitors as well to make this shitty Yelp wannabe.

    • Each week I seem to learn about a helpful new online service or two thanks to their massive user data breach. Thanks Slashdot! Even better, I get a taste of the corporate-level bullshit they spout. This is a grade-a prime, four star example:

      "Over 120 million users visit Zomato every month. What binds all of these varied individuals is the desire to enjoy the best a city has to offer, in terms of food. When Zomato users trust us with their personal information, they naturally expect the information to be safeguarded. And that's something we do diligently, without fail. We take cyber security very seriously -- if you've been a regular at Zomato for years, you'd agree."

      If this is security "without fail", I'm thinking maybe they don't have a clear grasp on what "fail" means. Because if you've been a regular at Zomato for years, your personal data is now out there flapping in the breeze.

  • by rsilvergun ( 571051 ) on Thursday May 18, 2017 @07:38PM (#54445859)
    I say massive data breach. Let's call the whole thing off.
  • by Anonymous Coward

    "Pay us 10 bitcoin or we tell everyone you like the rigatoni at Alfredo's."

  • by Anonymous Coward

    With all these breaches it seems like it would be easier for me to just sell my credentials directly and cut out the brokerage fee.

  • Okay, I give up. What was his alias really?

  • Looks like Zomato is going to become Zetchup.
  • Urbanspoon was pretty useful in new cities, to see what was around. Then Zomato came along, and things really sucked (it's funny that I can't remember now why it started to suck, because I got angry and deleted the app so quickly - i think the results changed to favor partners and it was a lot harder to search by genre, also maybe they required an account). I'm more surprised Zomato had 17 million users.

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