Domino’s Pizza on Tuesday said that it had refused to cave in to a 30,000 euro (US$41,000) extortion attempt by hackers who said they had stolen the personal data of 600,000 of its customers.
The pizza delivery giant told affected French and Belgian clients on Friday last week that it had been hacked into and that “some passwords” had been taken, giving those behind the attack access to data such as telephone numbers and addresses, though not to bank details.
That same day, a hacking group called Rex Mundi tweeted on an account that has since been deleted that it had given the US chain until 6pm GMT on Monday to pay 30,000 euros in exchange for not publishing the data.
A spokesperson for Domino’s Pizza on Tuesday said the US group had not paid the money, refusing “to yield to blackmail from any form of criminal organization.”
It is not yet known whether the hackers have published the data.
Gerome Billois, an expert at IT consultants Solucom, said Rex Mundi is not an unknown group of hackers.
However, it was “quite rare that these cases go public,” he said.
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