Vistaprint exposes customer data via unsecured database
Online printing service Vistaprint is the latest company to expose customer data online in what seems like a never-ending stream of companies exposing data to all and sundry.
The database, which contained more than 51,000 customer service interactions, was found by security researcher Oliver Hough via the Shodan security search engine, and it was not protected with a password.
It included the customer’s name, email address, phone number and the date and time of their interaction with customer service and other fields, including browser and network connection, operating system and internet service provider. The most recent records in the database, covering customers in the U.S., the U.K. and Ireland, dated to mid-September.
Hough reached out to Vistaprint but received no response and the database remained online. The database was only taken offline after TechCrunch today contacted the company, owned by Cimpress N.V., to ask it for details of the data breach.
“This is unacceptable and should not have happened under any circumstances,” the company told TechCrunch. “We’re currently carrying out a full investigation to understand what happened and how to prevent any future recurrence. At this time, we do not know whether this data has been accessed beyond the security researcher who found it.”
Since the parent company is located in The Netherlands, it’s subject to the European Union General Data Protection Regulation. Although Vistaprint says that it will now inform customers of the data breach, the regulation also imposes penalties where companies have not taken adequate measures to secure customer data. Not setting a password on a database hosted online would certainly meet the criteria of failing to undertake adequate security measures.
European bodies tasked with enforcing GDPR have been active in doing so. In October the European Data Protection Supervisor found that Microsoft Corp. contracts had breached the regulation. In May the U.K.’s Information Commissioner’s Office fined Marriott International Inc. $123.6 million for a 2018 data breach.
“Companies are all too often unaware of the possibility for others to find systems exposed to the Internet,” Craig Young, computer security researcher for cybersecurity firm Tripwire Inc.’s vulnerability and exposure research team, told SiliconANGLE. “Tools like Rob Graham’s masscan and services like Shodan or Censys now make it that much easier for minimally resourced individuals to scour the internet and reveal systems not intended for general public access.”
Image: Vistaprint
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