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Cyberattack on Suncor Energy Affects Petro-Canada Gas Stations

 

Customers have been reporting issues with Petro-Canada's loyalty and payment programmes for almost a week now, but the company maintains it is working to find solutions. 

Around a week ago, reports that the parent company Suncor had been hacked surfaced, sparking problems within the company. 

Suncor confirmed having a "cybersecurity incident" over the weekend and highlighted that, despite being certain that no employee or customer data had been stolen, "some transactions with customers and suppliers may be impacted."

One of the first sites where such disruptions were discovered was at Petro-Canada, where the chain's more than 1,500 outlets across the country were experiencing difficulties processing debit and credit payments. Other services affected include the loyalty programme app Petro-Points and a car wash-related service. 

Petro-Canada stated on Twitter that it is "making progress on resolving the disruptions customers have been experiencing and will continue to update you as more services come back online." We apologise for any inconvenience this has caused, and we thank you for patience." 

Massive implications 

Suncor has yet to link the cybersecurity incident to Petro-Canada problems, or even say what type of incident it was, but Ian Paterson, CEO of cybersecurity firm Plurilock, says the incident has some of the hallmarks of a "ransomware" attack, in which malicious actors gain access to a company's network and then hold it hostage in exchange for payment. He warns, though, that it might not be. 

"If a company is taking down systems voluntarily to try to figure out what happened, it would actually look very similar to a ransomware attack," Paterson stated. 

Those attacks frequently occur when hackers detect a vulnerability of some kind, hence they often take place during downtimes such as holidays or as we approach the weekend. Whatever the source, Paterson believes the corporation is dealing with a "massive problem" considering the length of the outage. 

Reputational harm

According to Jon Ferguson, general manager of cybersecurity at the Canadian Internet Registration Authority, the company's impact from this cybersecurity issue will be felt for a long time. He mentioned that one of the issues is that it is a huge organisation. 

"If they have to go in and modify critical systems, that can take a very long time to recover, depending on what's been damaged," Ferguson told The Canadian Press. "There's also the cost of disruption.I'm not sure how much gas Petro-Canada didn't sell since customers didn't have cash." 

Additionally, he noted that the cost of the harm to the company's reputation was very difficult to measure, but you're probably going to think twice before you slip your credit card into a Petro-Canada gas machine now. 

Businesses affected by cyber attacks

The incident is only the most recent cybersecurity breach to make headlines. Indigo was targeted by a ransomware attack in February, which disrupted credit and debit card payments for days and the online store for over a month.

In 2021, the American pipeline firm Colonial Pipeline went offline after hackers breached the corporation's servers. This attack halted the flow of gasoline over a critical pipeline that supplies the eastern seaboard, causing major shortages.

The Canadian Centre for Cyber Security warned last week that ransomware attacks — in which hackers gain access to a company's internal system and demand payment in exchange for restoring it — were the most serious cyber threat facing Canada's oil and gas industry.

Belgian and German MasterCard data breach




European unit of MasterCard Inc.’ has formally informed  Belgian and German's Data Protection regulators about a data breach from the company's Priceless Specials loyalty program.

Customers data are available on the internet include, names, payment card numbers, email addresses, home addresses, phone numbers, gender, and dates of birth.

The card company alerted the watchdog about the breach on Aug. 19 and said the episode would have affected thousands of people, “a significant portion” of them would be from Germany.

After the discovery of data leak, Mastercard suspended Priceless Specials Germany and took down its website. The message posted on the website says:  "This issue has no connection to MasterCard's payment network."

"We have received a lot of questions and complaints since the announcement of this incident, we want to reassure users: we have contacted MasterCard in order to get additional information, and are following this case closely together with the Hessian data protection authority and all the other possible concerned authorities," says David Stevens, Chairman of the Belgian Data Protection Authority.

According to Heise Media reports Excel spreadsheets containing data of 90,000 and 84,000 rows that were distributed on the internet.

"On August 21, 2019, we became aware that the second file of personal information was published on the Internet. We are working to remove them as well."