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Scrape Timestamp (UTC): 2024-08-20 14:33:49.664

Source: https://www.theregister.com/2024/08/20/flightaware_data_exposure/

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Plane-tracking app admits user passwords, SSNs exposed for over 3 years. Notification omits a number of key details. Popular flight-tracking app FlightAware has admitted that it was exposing a bunch of users' data for more than three years. It made the admission via a notification filed last week with Rob Bonta, California's attorney general, saying the leak began on January 1, 2021, but was only detected on July 25 of this year. The incident was blamed on an unspecified configuration error. It led to the exposure of personal information, passwords, and various other personal data points you'd expect to see in a breach, depending on what information the user provided in their account. The full list of potentially impacted data points is below: User ID Password Email address Full name Billing address Shipping address IP address Social media accounts Telephone numbers Year of birth Last four digits of your credit card number Information about aircraft owned Industry Title Pilot status (yes/no) Account activity (such as flights viewed and comments posted) Social Security Number How was this data exposed? We asked FlightAware and will update the story if it responds. The downside of filing data leak notifications in California is that the state doesn't require companies to publicly disclose how many people were affected, unlike Maine, for example, which does. Although we cannot determine the exact number of affected users, FlightAware reports having 12 million registered users. If all were affected, that would be quite the security snafu indeed. "FlightAware values your privacy and deeply regrets that this incident occurred," it wrote in a letter being sent to affected individuals.  "Once we discovered the exposure, we immediately remedied the configuration error. Out of an abundance of caution, we are also requiring all potentially impacted users to reset their password. You will be prompted to do so at your next log-in to FlightAware." It's typical with these types of breach notifications to comment on whether the data in question had been accessed and/or misused by unauthorized third parties. The letter to affected users did not address this matter. It's also typical for companies to offer free credit monitoring for users and the same is the case here. Anyone who receives a letter from FlightAware saying they may be affected was offered two years of service via Equifax.

Daily Brief Summary

DATA BREACH // FlightAware Exposes User Data Including SSNs for Three Years

FlightAware experienced a data breach exposing user details due to a configuration error beginning January 1, 2021, and detected only on July 25 of this year.

Exposed data included user IDs, passwords, email addresses, full names, addresses, IP addresses, social media accounts, telephone numbers, year of birth, last four digits of credit card numbers, information about owned aircraft, industry title, pilot status, account activities, and Social Security Numbers.

Although the exact number of impacted users remains undisclosed, FlightAware has 12 million registered users, all of whom might be affected.

Upon discovering the breach, FlightAware corrected the error and mandated all potentially impacted users to reset their passwords at their next login.

Affected users were offered two years of free credit monitoring services through Equifax.

FlightAware regrets the breach and emphasizes its commitment to user privacy, though it did not confirm whether the exposed data was accessed or misused by unauthorized parties.