JimMIA
There's more to life than mice...
- Joined
- Feb 16, 2005
- Messages
- 21,168
Uber is certainly not the only company that has paid off hackers, lol. Many of the major online companies we do business with every day have done the same thing.Another reason to consider avoiding Uber is the lack of ethics and willful violation of data breach notification laws:
Uber Hid 57-Million User Data Breach for Over a Year
https://www.wired.com/story/uber-paid-off-hackers-to-hide-a-57-million-user-data-breach/
Short snippet from article (in case people don't want to click links):
Not only did the ridesharing service lose control of 57 million people's private information [in October 2016], it also hid that massive breach for more than a year, a cover-up that potentially defied data breach disclosure laws. Uber may have even actively deceived Federal Trade Commission investigators who were already looking into the company for distinct, earlier data breach [in May 2014].
As bad as that data debacle sounds, Uber's response may end up doing the most damage to the company's relationship with users, and perhaps even exposed it to criminal charges against executives, according to those who have followed the company's ongoing FTC woes. According to Bloomberg, which originally broke the news of the breach, Uber paid a $100,000 ransom to its hackers to keep the breach quiet and delete the data they'd stolen.
Everyone has a different line for what is considered ethical behavior by a business. Hiding a massive data breach, paying off the hackers, and knowingly violating notification laws is so far past that line I can't even see the line. The line is a dot to me.
But again, that was the old Travis Kalanick regime, which has been replaced. Kalanick did a LOT of unethical things -- some much worse than this -- and that's why he's no longer the CEO.
In fact, if you read the whole article rather than selected "snippets," you'll learn that the new leadership reported this situation as soon as they took over. The ethical environment at Uber is vastly different today than it was two years ago when that breach occurred.