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Domino's has four hours to pay ransom for customers' passwords and favourite toppings
HACKERS IN FRANCE and Belgium have hijacked hundreds of thousands of accounts belonging to customers of Domino’s Pizza.
The group, called Rex Mundi, has given Domino’s a deadline of 7pm this evening to pay a ransom of €30,000 in exchange for over 600,000 records, including customers’ full names, addresses, phone numbers, email addresses, passwords, delivery instructions and favourite pizza toppings.
In an message posted to the pastebin site dpaste.de three days ago the group wrote:
Rex Mundi also released some sample data from the French site, and said:
Since then Domino’s France has tweeted about the incident, saying that professionals have managed to breach its encrypted data. It has advised customers to change their passwords.
Dutch Domino’s executive Andre ten Wolde told The Standard that credit card information had not been comprised.
The Independent reports that Rex Mundi have also tweeted a number of messages about the hack, including a recommendation to customers that they can sue Domino’s if their information is released.
However, that Twitter account has now been suspended.
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