A group of China-backed hackers believed to be responsible for
high-profile data breaches, including the U.S. Office of Personnel
Management and the insurance giant Anthem, has now hit another
high-profile target – United Airlines.
United detected a cyber attack into its computer systems in May or early June; Bloomberg reported, citing some unnamed sources familiar with the matter.
The same sources say that the hackers responsible for the data breach in
United's systems are the same group of China-backed hackers that
successfully carried out several other large heists, including the
United States' Office of Personnel Management and the health insurer Anthem Inc.
Dangerous Intentions
The stolen data includes manifests, which contain information on
flights' passengers and their origins and destinations, meaning that the
hackers have "data on the movements of Millions of Americans."
Since United Airlines is the world's second-largest airline and major
contractor for U.S. government travel, experts say that the vast cache
of information could be used to track the movements of specific
government or military officials.
Bloomberg also speculated that the combination of security-clearance records from OPM, insurance records from Anthem, and now travel records from United, could be used by hackers to blackmail Americans working in defense and intelligence.
United Airlines didn't immediately respond to the comment.
Although the recent data breach in United Airlines strongly suggests the company to improve its cyber security, United already launched a bug bounty program in May in an effort to find security holes in its products.
Two weeks ago, United paid two hackers more than 1 Million frequent-flyer miles each for finding multiple security vulnerabilities in the Airline's IT system.
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