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Hackers claim to have compromised personal data of 600,000 Domino’s Pizza customers

Posted on June 13, 2014 by Dissent

Jan Willem Aldershoff reports:

Hackers have reportedly stolen data of more than 600,000 Domino’s Pizza customers. A group of hackers demand € 30,000 before next Monday or they will make captured data public. The hacker group goes by the name Rex Mundi and claims to have hacked the websites of Domino’s Pizza in France and Belgium. They’ve announced their hack in a Tweet and disclosed further details in an anonymous text file.

Read more on Myce.

The hack was announced this morning on Twitter:

We hacked the websites of @dominos_pizzafr & Domino’s Belgium, and downloaded 600,000+ customer records. More info: dpaste.de/bXb9

— Rex Mundi (@RexMundi_Anon) June 13, 2014

By now, the dpaste.de file has been removed, but Aldershoff reports:

In the statement they write, “We downloaded over 592,000 customer records (including passwords) from French customers and over 58,000 records from Belgian ones. That’s over six hundred thousand records, which include the customers’ full names, addresses, phone numbers, email addresses, passwords and delivery instructions. (Oh, and their favorite pizza topping as well, because why not).”

The group demands €30,000 to not disclose the information and to reinforce the threat they already posted samples of the stolen data. According to the hackers they’ve contacted Domino’s Pizza but the company has not responded to their demands so far.  A Belgian newspaper reports the company has contacted all affected customers and argues no credit card information has been compromised.


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