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British Airways admits massive data breach including theft of credit card numbers

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Friday 1pm update:  Various reports in our comments and elsewhere suggest that – despite BA statements – people who have booked via telephone and with BA Holidays are receiving emails saying their details are compromised.  There are also other people like myself who made redemption bookings who have not received any email.  It is probably best to assume that any transaction you’ve made which led to a BA credit card charge is likely to be at risk

Friday 12.30pm update:  IAG’s share price is down 3.6% so far today as investors worry about compensation payments and the impact on future bookings.  The overall market is only down 1.0%.

Friday 11.30am update:  It is worth noting that ba.com now says “The personal and financial details of customers making or changing bookings on ba.com and the airline’s mobile app were compromised.”  This means that you might be affected even if you did not purchase a ticket during this period.

The official ba.com page with more information is here.

Friday 10am update:  I get two paragraphs in the Daily Telegraph today, both website and newspaper – see here.  The Alex Cruz interview on Radio 4 this morning confirms that the following data has been stolen:

  • email address
  • postal address
  • credit card number
  • expiration data
  • CVV

Your frequent flyer and passport data has not been impacted as that is not transmitted during the payment process.

On the upside, there is no sign of the vest yet:

I just realised that I have not received the BA email, even though I made a redemption booking on 3rd September.  Whilst this was an Avios booking, I paid taxes on a credit card and the payment process is the same as for a cash booking.

Friday 9.30am update:  BA appears to be in breach of ICO guidelines in its email to affected customers.  To quote from the ICO website:

“You need to describe, in clear and plain language, the nature of the personal data breach and, at least:

  • the name and contact details of your data protection officer (if your organisation has one) or other contact point where more information can be obtained;
  • a description of the likely consequences of the personal data breach; and
  • a description of the measures taken, or proposed to be taken, to deal with the personal data breach and including, where appropriate, of the measures taken to mitigate any possible adverse effects.”

Friday 9am update:  This breach is ONLY related to transactions made online at ba.com, not avios.com or BA Holidays it seems. This implies that BA may not have been encrypting payment details when they were sent to their payment processor and someone was picking them up on the way. You are at NO risk if you have a credit card stored at ba.com but did not make a purchase during this 2-week period.

Friday 8am update: It now appears that 380,000 transactions have been compromised.  You should have received an email overnight if you are included. There are no reports so far of card fraud linked to the breach and credit card companies are NOT replacing cards automatically. If you are nervous, you can report your Amex card as ‘lost’ via the website and it will be replaced.

The following press release just turned up from British Airways five minutes ago, for your information:

BRITISH AIRWAYS: THEFT OF CUSTOMER DATA

September 06, 2018

“British Airways is investigating, as a matter of urgency, the theft of customer data from its website, ba.com and the airline’s mobile app. The stolen data did not include travel or passport details.

From 22:58 BST August 21 2018 until 21:45 BST September 5 2018 inclusive, the personal and financial details of customers making bookings on ba.com and the airline’s app were compromised.

The breach has been resolved and our website is working normally.

British Airways is communicating with affected customers and we advise any customers who believe they may have been affected by this incident to contact their banks or credit card providers and follow their recommended advice.

We have notified the police and relevant authorities.

Alex Cruz, British Airways’ Chairman and Chief Executive said “We are deeply sorry for the disruption that this criminal activity has caused. We take the protection of our customers’ data very seriously.”

British Airways will provide further updates when appropriate.”

Coming just a week after the high profile launch of the September sale – bookings for which have been caught up in this – the timing could not be worse.

I feel a bit sorry for British Airways at the moment.  They have spent the last year reversing the cut-backs of 2016 (the changes to Club Europe catering on the 12th are almost the final piece of the jigsaw) but there is no sign of public perception improving.  Good news, of course, makes for less interesting press coverage than bad news, which is why coming back from bad publicity is always hard.

Following on from the IT outage from last year, this theft is likely to raise more questions about the decision to move much of BA’s IT infrastructure to India.  Whatever money it saved will be peanuts compared to the costs of dealing with this breach.

And, given that I made a couple of redemptions last week, it looks like I’m going to need a new British Airways American Express card ….

The official BA web page discussing the leak and what you should do is here.


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There are two official British Airways American Express cards with attractive sign-up bonuses:

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Comments (266)

This article is closed to new comments. Feel free to ask your question in the HfP forums.

  • Marko says:

    So thieves have stolen all the information that is needed for them to be able to use a card and yet AMEX are telling me (after trying to get through for 15 minutes on their line) that I don’t need to take any action?
    I find this hard to figure out. Could it be that they see BA as being liable for any fraudulent transactions and so slope their shoulders?
    Whatever, I don’t feel very comfortable and will be asking for a new card …………

    • Joan says:

      Amex said same to me ????‍♀️. Meanwhile I’ve deleted my stored cards on my Exec club account for now although that might be too late . Changed passwords on BA and Amex too for good measure

  • wmdore says:

    I was advised by BA on Twitter that BA Holidays were not affected and only those who receive an email should be concerned. Well I received an email this morning. So your 9AM update is either wrong, or I have been sent an email in error.

    What a complete shambles!

  • Tim says:

    I got the email this morning. My transaction was on the 19th, outside of the supposed timeframe

    • Anthony says:

      I got an email as well this morning, and my transaction, whilst during the timeframe, was done over the phone to BA Holidays.

      I was lead to believe those affected made the transactions online at ba.com, and that BA holidays were not affected.

  • TripRep says:

    “I feel a bit sorry for British Airways at the moment”

    Really?

    Surely this and other issues in the last couple of years are entirely of their own making?

  • Lili says:

    I fully agree that the only “feeling sorry” here should be for the customers – not BA. It is entirely a problem of their own making. When will companies learn that outsourcing anything but the simplest “click a button” operations to India eventually ends this way?

    I work in IT, and was faced with outsourcing to “low-cost centres”. Every single time we got anybody half-decent on a team there, within a few months they were gone, going on a visa to UK, US or other places. No talented / experienced people stay there long-term because the money they can make abroad is orders of magnitude higher than in India (doh! that’s why hiring them there through TCS and others is cheaper! and don’t forget the massive cut the consultancy takes before giving small part of your money to said developer).
    It is so tiring trying to argue with upper management that yes, you might get 3 developers there for the price of 1 in London, but they will take at least 3-4 times as long as that single developer to get anything done, will require continuous oversight from somebody in UK, not to mention that there are problems they simply will not solve/notice no matter how much time you give them.
    You pay peanuts, you get monkeys. It really is as simple as that. Management of a company that refuses to accept this fully deserves everything coming their way.

    I actually did the maths last time when BA had the meltdown. The reported cost of that would have allowed them to hire a good size IT team in London for *years*. Penny wise pound foolish comes to mind.

    • Carl says:

      “but they will take at least 3-4 times as long as that single developer to get anything done, will require continuous oversight from somebody in UK, not to mention that there are problems they simply will not solve/notice no matter how much time you give them”

      As somebody that employs developers in the UK I can say that these issues apply to a surprisingly large amount of well paid UK based developers as well. Unfortunately demand far exceeds the supply of developers over here, let alone good quality developers. Not that I’m in favour of outsourcing, just feeling the frustration of recruiting quality staff.

      • Simon says:

        Agree, I would say it’s simplistic to say a UK based IT infrastructure and dev team would never have these issues and further that this is almost an expected issue when outsourced to India.

      • Lili says:

        I fully agree that getting good devs here in UK (and, I expect, anywhere else) is very difficult. It’s just my experience is just that in low-cost location it’s not just “very difficult”, it’s bordering on impossible. To willingly ditch the *chance* (not: guarantee) of getting quality staff… well, not the wisest choice 🙂
        Also agreed 100% that even team based here is not a guarantee of lack of problems, and I’ve seen my fair share of incompetent people here, too. However, ditching teams here is practically a guarantee you will have problems – it’s just a matter of time. Some systems continue for some time as a matter of inertia (a well designed system will take some time to break…), at first it might even seem like it was a good idea!

        • An IT person says:

          I would agree with Lili but add, I would suggest that if the same ability threshold was applied offshore and onshore, the problem would reduce somewhat. In addition, again from personal experience I perceive that cultural fit means that South Asian teams are less inclined to pro-actively spot problems or challenge requests, and would rather just complete the task, as requested, and often do so in a quick-and-dirty way to ensure finishing on time. (Of course some of these traits apply to UK too… but far less so and is easier to manage in person.)
          [As a side note to show it’s not offshoring per-se that’s the problem: experience with other offshore locations in Eastern Europe has been fantastic!]

    • Tom says:

      Well said! As always with this style of management they start out thinking that professionals are expensive! Then they realise how much amateurs cost them.

    • BP says:

      TCS base salary for a new graduate is something like £3.5k a year. You could have 10 of these and make a nice profit for the cost of 1 UK developer.

      • Lili says:

        That might be the SALARY of the graduate in India, but this is NOT what TCS will charge the client here in UK – and that’s the point I was making with “don’t forget the massive cut the consultancy takes before giving small part of your money to said developer”. You will not get 10 devs for the price of 1 (and I’m not even talking here about the delivery ability of said 10 devs). You will get 3, max 4 – at least that was what they were charging my last client. My manager was fighting to death to be able to spend his budget on a single UK-based dev instead of a bunch there.

    • Chris says:

      This is incredibly accurate. I’ve worked a lot in this field, and find that the best off-shore developers don’t stick around for long, or they’re shifted from performing customer work, to training new staff. This isn’t to say that good outcomes aren’t possible, but they require much more competent management.

      • Lili says:

        Indeed. Some of the best developers I know are actually born and bred in India – so it’s not like there isn’t talent there. It’s just that none of them live in India anymore… 🙂
        I also expect that out of the small-ish population of good devs there that actually decide to stay in the country, vast majority will go to work for e.g. Google – not TCS.

  • James Boyle says:

    Has anybody affected made a booking with a card other than Amex? Just wondering if other card companies are advising to cancel cards or not.

    • ft_overthehorizon says:

      Yes, using my Saga Visa.

      They were very responsive (30-secs on hold, the agent said he was dealing with nothing else today except BA breach queries). Card blocked, number changed, “will be in the post Monday”.

      I can’t recommend Saga highly enough – excellent forex rates/charges and a super-responsive CS team. One of the slight benefits of breaching 50 !!!

    • Ant says:

      I did 3 bookings during the period on BA for flight redemptions and got the email. I paid using my Lloyds Amex avios card and got through straight away to Lloyds and they advised on cancelling the card. A new one will be in the post in the next 3 days.

  • Maxim says:

    Is Iberia.com affected as well? Any info on that? Didn’t make any booking on ba but made one on iberia and would suspect they must share some infra…

    • marcw says:

      AFAIK Iberia is not BA. So no.

      • Russ says:

        Not even if you’ve linked you IB number to BA to transfer avios?

        • Brian W says:

          What’s transferring Avios from IB to BA got to do with make a flight booking using a credit or debit card on BA? It has been pretty clear from the first statement that the breach was during the transfer of data when making (and now it seems amending) a booking where payment was involved.

  • Tony says:

    I made a redemption booking and paid the taxes during the relevant period. Like Rob, I also haven’t received the email. Is there any suggestion that such bookings weren’t impacted?

    • Rob says:

      I don’t see how they can’t be impacted given that it is an identical booking platform. I get a feeling when BA drew up the mailing list for the email someone forgot to include redemptions.

      • Lawro says:

        Made a redemption booking on 31/8 – have received the email overnight…

      • Chris L says:

        I made a redemption booking by phone on Friday and I received the email.

        • Mark Smith says:

          +1, did an avios 241 booking earlier this week (paid taxes and fees as normal) and got an email at 1am saying I may have been affected.

      • Eshaq Choudhury says:

        I think redemptions were the lost lot to get the emails as I also got it overnight. Most others appear to have got theirs during the day before. Most likely they forgot redemptions in the initial batch and then someone remembered.

    • Andrew says:

      Not sure. I made a redemption booking *before* the affected window at 01:03 on 21 August but I *have* received an email.

      I made a car hire booking too (on 25 August), but that’s a BA Holidays booking so shouldn’t be impacted I think.

      So, all a bit odd.

    • luckyjim says:

      I made two redemptions during the window – no other bookings – and I got the email at 3:00am this morning.

      It is not from the usual customers services address so maybe check your spam folders?

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