Home Depot Hackers Exposed 53 Million Email Addresses
Hot Trending 2015: The hackers that engineered a massive credit card breach at Home Depot last September appear to have also exposed 53 million customer email addresses, reports The Wall Street Journal's Shelly Banjo.
Home Depot confirmed the hackers' success at stealing credit card data in a statement two months ago.
"We want you to know that we have now confirmed that those systems have in fact been breached, which could potentially impact any customer that has used their payment card at our U.S. and Canadian stores, from April forward," said Home Depot at the time.
The hackers reportedly accessed Home Depot's customer data through a vendor's billing account, which led them to some of the company's point of sale (POS) terminals.
This data breach may be even bigger and affect more people than the massive attack against Target last year in which 40 million payment cards were stolen, reports journalist Brian Krebs of Krebs on Security, who broke the news.
Home Depot has not yet disclosed how many customers or payment cards might have been involved in this hack. But it did "apologize for the frustration and anxiety this causes our customers."
Retailer Target also suffered a similar credit card data breach last winter, and as the Wall Street Journal reports, it happened in much the same way, through a refrigeration contractor's electronic billing account, then filtering down to payment terminals.
It's unclear what the hackers' plans are for the stolen email addresses.
We've reached out Home Depot and will update this if we hear back.
Home Depot confirmed the hackers' success at stealing credit card data in a statement two months ago.
"We want you to know that we have now confirmed that those systems have in fact been breached, which could potentially impact any customer that has used their payment card at our U.S. and Canadian stores, from April forward," said Home Depot at the time.
The hackers reportedly accessed Home Depot's customer data through a vendor's billing account, which led them to some of the company's point of sale (POS) terminals.
This data breach may be even bigger and affect more people than the massive attack against Target last year in which 40 million payment cards were stolen, reports journalist Brian Krebs of Krebs on Security, who broke the news.
Home Depot has not yet disclosed how many customers or payment cards might have been involved in this hack. But it did "apologize for the frustration and anxiety this causes our customers."
Retailer Target also suffered a similar credit card data breach last winter, and as the Wall Street Journal reports, it happened in much the same way, through a refrigeration contractor's electronic billing account, then filtering down to payment terminals.
It's unclear what the hackers' plans are for the stolen email addresses.
We've reached out Home Depot and will update this if we hear back.
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