McDonald's database hacked, user email addresses, birthday info stolen
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The following comments relate to this news article:
article published on 14 December, 2010
McDonald's has confirmed today that hackers broke into a database containing email addresses and birthdays for consumers who have signed up for McDonald's promotions.
The fast food chain made it clear that no sensitive information, like credit card numbers, Social Security numbers or physical addresses were compromised.
"The incident has resulted in an investigation by law enforcement ... [ read the full article ]
Please read the original article before posting your comments.
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Member
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14. December 2010 @ 01:20 |
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Well maybe these people will have to get healthier foods now.
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stuntman_
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14. December 2010 @ 01:22 |
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lol why would someone steal this information? It must have been burger king!
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Tristan_2
Member
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14. December 2010 @ 01:35 |
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I highly doubt to believe a Hacker did this, Your Typical Hacker wouldn't do this
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stuntman_
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14. December 2010 @ 03:26 |
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thats what I think! burger king hired a hacker to send spam mail promoting the whopper!
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AfterDawn Addict
1 product review
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14. December 2010 @ 04:55 |
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Probably some kid just trying to prove that he could do it.
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Member
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14. December 2010 @ 08:27 |
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just remember huge email lists are worth a lot on the black market.
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dEwMe
Senior Member
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14. December 2010 @ 08:38 |
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OMG...They stole my birthday!!!
Yeah even the b-days are worth something correlated with the emails...Information is money for these marketing types and like anything else some don't care how they get it.
You prob shouldn't be handing your email to any of these companies if you are concerned about SPAM and etc anyway...
Just my $0.02,
dEwMe
This message has been edited since posting. Last time this message was edited on 14. December 2010 @ 08:39
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Blessedon
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14. December 2010 @ 09:58 |
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The only reason ANY company offers promotions is to get your information.
Arc sold it to make a buck by telling the rogue third party how to hack it.
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Tristan_2
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14. December 2010 @ 10:42 |
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Originally posted by Blessedon: The only reason ANY company offers promotions is to get your information.
Arc sold it to make a buck by telling the rogue third party how to hack it.
That could very well be possible a scheme when it came to Mcdonalds Monopoly did happen on the inside once
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plazma247
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14. December 2010 @ 11:26 |
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HAHA, i think Arc probably already sold it and when they worked out the spammers they sold it to looked like they were going to do something or had done something silly and they get found out .....
(how did they know my birthday as well... ?)
... they hit a pre-emptive strike and say we got hacked.
Why didnt they notify the customers directly they had lost their details, how do the customers know if they have been effected.
What would be intresting is if some got a target spam from this database that could be identified and it pre-dates them saying it was hacked...
This message has been edited since posting. Last time this message was edited on 14. December 2010 @ 11:28
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jam_k
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14. December 2010 @ 14:42 |
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Originally posted by plazma247:
Why didnt they notify the customers directly they had lost their details, how do the customers know if they have been effected.
They did:
Dear Valued McDonald's Customer,
Our records indicate you previously elected to submit information to McDonald's in connection with one of our websites or promotions. We wanted to let you know there is a possibility that the limited information you provided to McDonald's through its websites or promotions was improperly accessed by an unauthorized third party.
By way of background, McDonald's asked Arc Worldwide, a long-time business partner, to develop and coordinate the distribution of promotional emails. Arc hired an email service provider, a standard business practice, to supervise and manage the email database. That email service provider has advised that its computer systems recently were accessed by an unauthorized third party, and that information, including information that you provided to McDonald's, may have been accessed by that unauthorized third party. Law enforcement officials have been notified and are investigating this incident.
McDonald's does not collect sensitive financial information, such as Social Security Numbers or credit card numbers, online or through email. As such, the information improperly accessed did not include this type of information. Rather, the limited information you provided to McDonald's included information required to confirm your age, a method to contact you (such as name, mobile phone number, and postal address and/or email address), and other general preference information. In the event that you are contacted by someone claiming to be from McDonald's asking for personal or financial information, do not respond and instead immediately contact us at the number below so we can contact the authorities. Please remember, McDonald's would not ask for that type of information online or through email.
We apologize for any concern this incident may cause. Protecting our valued customers is very important to us. If you have any questions or concerns, rather than replying to this email, please contact us immediately at our toll-free number 1-800-244-6227. For additional information please visit our website at www.mcdonalds.com/notice.
Sincerely,
McDonald's Customer Satisfaction Team
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lissenup2
Suspended permanently
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14. December 2010 @ 14:45 |
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This was done so the hacker could pass on a Happy F'ing Birthday to everyone.
What's wrong with that? I think it's kinda nice. ;)
This message has been edited since posting. Last time this message was edited on 14. December 2010 @ 14:45
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plazma247
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14. December 2010 @ 16:41 |
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Originally posted by jam_k: Originally posted by plazma247:
Why didnt they notify the customers directly they had lost their details, how do the customers know if they have been effected.
They did:
Ahh well at least they notified the people, however when:
age, name, mobile phone number, postal address and email have all been breached, they say ....
Social Security Numbers or credit card are not collected... i should hope not.
BUT, when you have someones age/address/dob your only a couple of bin dives and a utility bill or two away from something just as bad.
! SHAME SHAME SHAME ON YOU ARC !
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Senior Member
28 product reviews
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15. December 2010 @ 14:30 |
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They should have stolen the recipe to find out what REALLY is in their hamburgers. Thank goodness I don't eat that crap anyways.
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Senior Member
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15. December 2010 @ 18:32 |
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Oh Crap they figured out the password to the database was McMuffin.
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leemoo
Junior Member
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16. December 2010 @ 10:20 |
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Maybe it was the Hamburlgar
This message has been edited since posting. Last time this message was edited on 16. December 2010 @ 10:21
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