Cybercrime

Warner Music Discloses Data Breach Affecting e-Commerce Websites

Warner Music Group last week started informing customers of its e-commerce websites that their personal information may have been compromised as a result of a data breach suffered by an external service provider.

<p><strong><span><span>Warner Music Group last week started informing customers of its e-commerce websites that their personal information may have been compromised as a result of a data breach suffered by an external service provider.</span></span></strong></p>

Warner Music Group last week started informing customers of its e-commerce websites that their personal information may have been compromised as a result of a data breach suffered by an external service provider.

In a data breach notification submitted to the California Attorney General, the music company said it learned of the breach on August 5, but the hackers had access to the impacted websites since April 25, 2020. It’s unclear exactly which sites were hacked, but the company said it was “a number of US-based e-commerce websites” that it operates.

The attackers may have copied information provided by users on the affected e-commerce websites, including name, email address, phone number, billing and shipping address, and payment card details such as card number, expiration date and CVV. Payments made via PayPal are not impacted.

Based on Warner Music’s limited description of the incident, this appears to be a Magecart-style attack, where cybercriminals compromise e-commerce websites or service providers and plant skimmer malware that harvests personal and financial information when customers make a purchase.

“While we cannot definitively confirm that your personal information was affected, it is possible that it might have been as your transaction(s) occurred during the period of compromise. If it was, this might have exposed you to a risk of fraudulent transactions being carried out using your details,” Warner Music wrote in a letter sent to potentially impacted customers.

Warner Music says it has launched an investigation into the incident and it has notified both law enforcement and the issuers of the compromised credit cards. The company is offering affected customers 12 months of free identity monitoring services through Kroll.

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