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Bigbasket faces potential data breach; details of 2 crore users up for sale on dark web

Cyber intelligence firm Cyble says a hacker has put data allegedly belonging to Bigbasket on sale for about Rs 30 lakh in a cyber crime market. The e-grocer says customer confidentiality is priority and it does not store any financial data.

Bigbasket faces potential data breach; details of 2 crore users up for sale on dark web

Monday November 09, 2020 , 2 min Read

Grocery e-commerce platform Bigbasket has faced a potential data breach that could have leaked details of around two crore users, according to cyber intelligence firm Cyble.


The company has filed a police complaint in this regard with Cyber Crime Cell in Bengaluru and is verifying claims made by cyber experts.

Cyble said a hacker has put data allegedly belonging to Bigbasket on sale for around Rs 30 lakh.

"In the course of our routine dark web monitoring, the research team at Cyble found the database of Big Basket for sale in a cyber crime market, being sold for over $40,000. The leak contains a database portion; with the table name 'member member'. The size of the SQL file is about 15 GB, containing close to 20 million user data," Cyble said in its blog.


It added the data put on sale includes names, email IDs, password hashes, contact numbers (mobile and phone), addresses, date of birth, location, and IP addresses of login among many others.


While Cyble has mentioned "passwords", the company uses a one-time password sent through SMS which keeps on changing every time a user logs in.

"A few days ago, we learnt about a potential data breach at Bigbasket and are evaluating the extent of the breach and authenticity of the claim in consultation with cybersecurity experts and finding immediate ways to contain it. We have also lodged a complaint with the Cyber Crime Cell in Bengaluru and intend to pursue this vigorously to bring the culprits to book," Bigbasket said in a statement.
Bigbasket

Image Source: Shutterstock

The company said the privacy and confidentiality of customers is priority and it does not store any financial data, including credit card numbers etc, and was confident that this financial data was secure.


"The only customer data that we maintain are email IDs, phone numbers, order details, and addresses so these are the details that could potentially have been accessed. We have a robust information security framework that employs best-in-class resources and technologies to manage our information. We will continue to proactively engage with best-in-class information security experts to strengthen this further," Bigbasket said.

The Bengaluru-based company is funded by Alibaba Group, Mirae Asset-Naver Asia Growth Fund, and the UK government-owned CDC group.

Cyble claimed that the breach occurred on October 30, 2020, and it had already informed the Bigbasket management about it.


Edited by Teja Lele