Data breach
#1
Original Poster




Join Date: Nov 2014
Posts: 533
Data breach
Just received this.... seems to be becoming very common place amongst airlines.
Dear Mr .....
At Cathay Pacific, we are committed to protecting your personal data and your privacy, and we take this commitment very seriously. As a consequence we wanted to let you know as soon as possible that we learnt of an incident experienced by a third-party service provider: SITA (SITA Passenger Service System) used by some of our oneworld partner airlines.
To be clear, this incident did not involve any Cathay Pacific systems or systems related to the services we use. Instead, the incident relates to SITA services used by certain airlines we have partnered with.
As part of the oneworld service, these airlines do have limited and basic information specifically your name, membership number and tier, seating preferences and a code corresponding to your meal preferences.
As far as Cathay Pacific is concerned, we can reassure you that your account remains secure thanks to numerous established security measures keeping your account protected. You therefore do not need to take any steps as regards to your account with us.
We have asked SITA to keep us informed about any development relating to this incident and we will continue to monitor the situation as it develops. We will update you again in the event any further important information becomes available.
Yours sincerely,
Marco Polo Club
Dear Mr .....
At Cathay Pacific, we are committed to protecting your personal data and your privacy, and we take this commitment very seriously. As a consequence we wanted to let you know as soon as possible that we learnt of an incident experienced by a third-party service provider: SITA (SITA Passenger Service System) used by some of our oneworld partner airlines.
To be clear, this incident did not involve any Cathay Pacific systems or systems related to the services we use. Instead, the incident relates to SITA services used by certain airlines we have partnered with.
As part of the oneworld service, these airlines do have limited and basic information specifically your name, membership number and tier, seating preferences and a code corresponding to your meal preferences.
As far as Cathay Pacific is concerned, we can reassure you that your account remains secure thanks to numerous established security measures keeping your account protected. You therefore do not need to take any steps as regards to your account with us.
We have asked SITA to keep us informed about any development relating to this incident and we will continue to monitor the situation as it develops. We will update you again in the event any further important information becomes available.
Yours sincerely,
Marco Polo Club
#5


Join Date: Jan 2006
Programs: AAdvantage Asia Miles Air China
Posts: 892
Best to know what SITA does
This means that the data on CX shared with any other airline could have been compromised on SITA.
To explain, SITA was set up to facilitate connectivity between airlines at the beginning of the computer age to enable communication to flow between them. It now operates one of the worlds largest global networks.
This means that say neither CX not SQ systems were compromised, yet data travelling between the two was, i.e. over the SITA network with its multiple nodes, servers, and storage devices.
From reading the CX and AA notices I received it looks as if data was compromised over the SITA network.
#6
FlyerTalk Evangelist



Join Date: Jul 2006
Location: Hong Kong, France
Programs: FB , BA Gold/OW emerald, QR
Posts: 17,036
Message from BA:
Dear Customer,
We take the protection of your data very seriously.
We have been notified of a data breach at global technology company SITA, an IT services provider to many airlines around the world. SITA is not British Airways’ booking and reservations system provider and SITA’s breach does not involve our customers’ financial information or password as SITA does not have access to this data. Please be reassured that this incident was not a breach of British Airways' systems.
Along with many other airlines, we do share limited information with partner airlines in order to enhance your experience when flying with them. We have been notified by SITA that some British Airways Executive Club Members’ names, membership numbers and some of their preferences, such as seating, has been impacted.
The password you use for your account is not held by SITA and has not been put at risk by this breach.
As a precaution, given the potential that customers have re-used passwords used for other websites, we are taking the following action to protect you:
We know fraudsters try to use situations like this to their advantage. We will not contact you by phone and ask for your password - please do not reveal your password to anyone claiming to be from British Airways. If you need to contact us, you can do so via our contact centres.
We are sorry for the inconvenience caused and thank you for your continued support and cooperation in helping us to keep your information safe and secure.
British Airways
Dear Customer,
We take the protection of your data very seriously.
We have been notified of a data breach at global technology company SITA, an IT services provider to many airlines around the world. SITA is not British Airways’ booking and reservations system provider and SITA’s breach does not involve our customers’ financial information or password as SITA does not have access to this data. Please be reassured that this incident was not a breach of British Airways' systems.
Along with many other airlines, we do share limited information with partner airlines in order to enhance your experience when flying with them. We have been notified by SITA that some British Airways Executive Club Members’ names, membership numbers and some of their preferences, such as seating, has been impacted.
The password you use for your account is not held by SITA and has not been put at risk by this breach.
As a precaution, given the potential that customers have re-used passwords used for other websites, we are taking the following action to protect you:
- Please log into your account and reset your password
- Please create a new password that you have not used elsewhere
- Once your password has been reset and you have completed a verification step, you will be able to regain full access to your account
We know fraudsters try to use situations like this to their advantage. We will not contact you by phone and ask for your password - please do not reveal your password to anyone claiming to be from British Airways. If you need to contact us, you can do so via our contact centres.
We are sorry for the inconvenience caused and thank you for your continued support and cooperation in helping us to keep your information safe and secure.
British Airways
#8



Join Date: Sep 2005
Location: TPE / HSZ
Programs: CX GO (=SPH), IHG Diamond Amb, Hertz 5*, Accor, Hilton, National
Posts: 7,220
This is one possibility. Another possibility may be, if the breach happened several years ago, due to MH (and S7) using SITA's GDS/CRS. SITA may have stored a copy of membership numbers, names, and tiers. Both MH and S7 migrated to Amadeus afterwards. At least in Amadeus and Sabre, you can get the name match confirmation and tier status using a member's membership number almost instantly, and it is my understanding that Amadeus and Sabre each has a local copy of the information.
#9


Join Date: Jun 2005
Location: HKG, LHR
Posts: 1,621
On a separate note, I got this about a previous data breach today :
DID CATHAY PACIFIC NOTIFY YOU ABOUT A DATA INCIDENT ON OR AROUND OCTOBER 24, 2018?
THIS NOTICE MAY AFFECT YOUR LEGAL RIGHTS
A class action settlement has been reached in McLean v. Cathay Pacific Airways Limited, S.C.B.C. No. VLC-S-S-199228. The action was certified by the Supreme Court of British Columbia. The settlement is a compromise of disputed claims and is not an admission of liability, wrongdoing or fault by any of the defendant. The proposed settlement is subject to the approval of the Court.
There is a link below. Anyone heard of this? They said the settlement was a little over $1.5 million.
DID CATHAY PACIFIC NOTIFY YOU ABOUT A DATA INCIDENT ON OR AROUND OCTOBER 24, 2018?
THIS NOTICE MAY AFFECT YOUR LEGAL RIGHTS
A class action settlement has been reached in McLean v. Cathay Pacific Airways Limited, S.C.B.C. No. VLC-S-S-199228. The action was certified by the Supreme Court of British Columbia. The settlement is a compromise of disputed claims and is not an admission of liability, wrongdoing or fault by any of the defendant. The proposed settlement is subject to the approval of the Court.
There is a link below. Anyone heard of this? They said the settlement was a little over $1.5 million.
#11


Join Date: Mar 2012
Location: Vancouver, Manila, Singapore, Kuala Lumpur, Hong Kong
Posts: 348
On a separate note, I got this about a previous data breach today :
DID CATHAY PACIFIC NOTIFY YOU ABOUT A DATA INCIDENT ON OR AROUND OCTOBER 24, 2018?
THIS NOTICE MAY AFFECT YOUR LEGAL RIGHTS
A class action settlement has been reached in McLean v. Cathay Pacific Airways Limited, S.C.B.C. No. VLC-S-S-199228. The action was certified by the Supreme Court of British Columbia. The settlement is a compromise of disputed claims and is not an admission of liability, wrongdoing or fault by any of the defendant. The proposed settlement is subject to the approval of the Court.
There is a link below. Anyone heard of this? They said the settlement was a little over $1.5 million.
DID CATHAY PACIFIC NOTIFY YOU ABOUT A DATA INCIDENT ON OR AROUND OCTOBER 24, 2018?
THIS NOTICE MAY AFFECT YOUR LEGAL RIGHTS
A class action settlement has been reached in McLean v. Cathay Pacific Airways Limited, S.C.B.C. No. VLC-S-S-199228. The action was certified by the Supreme Court of British Columbia. The settlement is a compromise of disputed claims and is not an admission of liability, wrongdoing or fault by any of the defendant. The proposed settlement is subject to the approval of the Court.
There is a link below. Anyone heard of this? They said the settlement was a little over $1.5 million.
I'm a Canadian citizen from BC but living in Kuala Lumpur Malaysia. Honestly can't remember if i submitted my email for the class action back in 2018. I'm guessing I did.
#12


Join Date: Apr 2015
Posts: 501
Same here I don't remember I submitted my email and received this too. Canadian citizen from BC stuck in Shanghai, China.
#13




Join Date: Sep 2014
Location: DTW - Rochester Hills, MI
Programs: Cathay MPC, IHG Diamond Ambassador, Domestic Airline Nobody
Posts: 787
So glad that ambulance chasing lawyers will use these frivolous nuisance class-action lawsuits to bleed corporations. Each "member" of the class will get $2.00 USD, and the lawyers will get 30%.
#14




Join Date: Nov 2017
Programs: MPC-DM, Enrich-Plat
Posts: 1,366
Yeah, just principally disgusting.
Anyway, I received the message from both CX and SQ, where my SQ Krisflyer subscription was only just 1 week old, when I received the notice
This suggests, the breach was very recent OR SQ did just sent everybody this notice, independent whether the breach was earlier on.
Anyway, I received the message from both CX and SQ, where my SQ Krisflyer subscription was only just 1 week old, when I received the notice

This suggests, the breach was very recent OR SQ did just sent everybody this notice, independent whether the breach was earlier on.
#15
FlyerTalk Evangelist


Join Date: Nov 2009
Location: Earth. Residency:HKG formerly:YYZ
Programs: CX, DL, Nexus/GE, APEC
Posts: 11,078
Yeah, just principally disgusting.
Anyway, I received the message from both CX and SQ, where my SQ Krisflyer subscription was only just 1 week old, when I received the notice
This suggests, the breach was very recent OR SQ did just sent everybody this notice, independent whether the breach was earlier on.
Anyway, I received the message from both CX and SQ, where my SQ Krisflyer subscription was only just 1 week old, when I received the notice

This suggests, the breach was very recent OR SQ did just sent everybody this notice, independent whether the breach was earlier on.



