HIGHLIGHTS
- The McDelivery app leaked personal information of McDonald’s customers
- Users in South & West regions impacted
- McDonald’s did not deny the leak; said no financial information stored
McDonald’s India app McDelivery leaked personal information of its customers for an unspecified duration of time, Cybersecurity firm Fallible reported on Saturday. This included “name, email address, phone number, home address, accurate home co-ordinates, and social profile links” for “more than 2.2 million” of its users.
According to a blog post published by the firm, “an unprotected publicly accessible API endpoint for getting user details coupled with serially enumerable integers as customer IDs can be used to obtain access to all users personal information.” Gadgets 360 was able to independently verify this claim using information provided by the firm to access data of some customers.
It’s worth pointing out that McDonald’s operations in India are split into two entities – McDonald’s India (West & South) and McDonald’s India (North & East), and the McDelivery app and website are owned and operated by the former entity. Customers in North and East of India use another app and website, so their data doesn’t seem to be impacted by this leak.
Fallible says it first reported the issue to McDonald’s India on February 4, though it’s possible the leak has been around for much longer. It’s unclear at this point if anyone else knew about the leak and if they were able to exploit it to download data of all McDonald’s India (West & South) customers. The leak remained unplugged hours after Fallible’s blog post was published, so if the data hadn’t been accessed earlier, it could’ve certainly been downloaded since.
At the time of publishing this post, McDonald’s seems to have plugged the hole that we used to access user data, but Fallible says “The McDonald’s fix is incomplete and the endpoint is still leaking data. We have communicated this again to them and are waiting for their response.”
As is clear from the statement, the company does not deny that personal information was being leaked; instead it’s just highlighting the fact that the company stores no financial information of the users – as if that’s supposed to make customers feel better. Unfortunately, in the absence of strong data privacy and protection laws, customers in India have no real recourse but to get on with their lives.
Sоurсе: gadgets.ndtv.com