Live Nation confirms Ticketmaster was hacked, says personal information stolen in data breach
Reading Time: 2 minutesEntertainment giant Live Nation has confirmed its ticketing subsidiary Ticketmaster has been hacked.
Live Nation confirmed the data breach in a filing with government regulators late on Friday after the markets closed.
In its statement, Live Nation said the breach occurred on May 20, and that a cybercriminal ‘offered what it alleged to be Company user data for sale via the dark web.’ The company did not say who the personal information belongs to, though it’s believed to relate to customers. It’s unclear why it took the company more than a week to publicly disclose the breach.
Live Nation said in its statement that it ‘identified unauthorized activity within a third-party cloud database environment containing Company data.’
The company did not name the third-party cloud database in its statement.
Ticketmaster’s spokesperson did not say how the data was exfiltrated from Snowflake’s systems.
Snowflake said in a post on Friday that it had informed a ‘limited number of customers who we believe may have been impacted’ by attacks ‘targeting some of our customers’ accounts.’ Snowflake did not describe the nature of the attacks, or if data had been stolen from customer accounts.
Snowflake spokesperson Danica Stanczak declined to comment on the record about Ticketmaster’s breach.
Amazon Web Services also hosts much of Live Nation and Ticketmaster’s infrastructure, according to a since-removed customer case study on Amazon’s website.
Earlier this week, the administrator of a since-revived popular cybercrime forum called BreachForums claimed to be selling the personal information of 560 million customers, including the alleged personal information of Ticketmaster customers, along with ticket sales and customer card information.
Until now, Live Nation had not commented on the data breach. Earlier this week, Australian authorities confirmed it was assisting Live Nation with a cybersecurity incident, and U.S. cybersecurity agency CISA deferred comment to Live Nation.
Earlier in May, the Department of Justice and 30 attorneys general sued Live Nation to break up the ticketing conglomerate, accusing Live Nation of monopolistic practices.
Updated with response from Ticketmaster, and Snowflake’s decline.
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Ref: techcrunch
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