Submit your comments on this article |
Science |
Panerabread.com Leaks Millions of Customer Records in plain text |
2018-04-04 |
![]() The data available in plain text from Panera’s site appeared to include records for any customer who has signed up for an account to order food online via panerabread.com. The St. Louis-based company, which has more than 2,100 retail locations in the United States and Canada, allows customers to order food online for pickup in stores or for delivery. KrebsOnSecurity learned about the breach earlier today after being contacted by security researcher Dylan Houlihan, who said he initially notified Panera about customer data leaking from its Web site back on August 2, 2017. A long message thread that Houlihan shared between himself and Panera indicates that Mike Gustavison, Panera’s director of information security, initially dismissed Houlihan’s report as a likely scam. A week later, however, those messages suggest that the company had validated Houlihan’s findings and was working on a fix. “Thank you for the information we are working on a resolution,” Gustavison wrote. Fast forward to early this afternoon — exactly eight months to the day after Houlihan first reported the problem — and data shared by Houlihan indicated the site was still leaking customer records in plain text. Worse still, the records could be indexed and crawled by automated tools with very little effort. For example, some of the customer records include unique identifiers that increment by one for each new record, making it potentially simple for someone to scrape all available customer accounts. The format of the database also lets anyone search for customers via a variety of data points, including by phone number. “Panera Bread uses sequential integers for account IDs, which means that if your goal is to gather as much information as you can instead about someone, you can simply increment through the accounts and collect as much as you’d like, up to and including the entire database,” Houlihan said. Asked whether he saw any indication that Panera ever addressed the issue he reported in August 2017 until today, Houlihan said no. “No, the flaw never disappeared,” he said. “I checked on it every month or so because I was pissed.” Shortly after KrebsOnSecurity spoke briefly with Panera’s chief information officer John Meister by phone today, the company briefly took the Web site offline. As of this publication, the site is back online but the data referenced above no longer appears to be reachable. |
Posted by:3dc |
#6 Bimbo bakery bread Bimbo Bakeries USA is a leader in the baking industry, known for its category leading brands, innovative products, freshness and quality. As part of Grupo Bimbo, the world’s largest baking company, BBU is proud to share the company philosophyHighly Productive and Deeply Humane in the U.S. |
Posted by: 3dc 2018-04-04 20:20 |
#5 er...yup. |
Posted by: Procopius2k 2018-04-04 16:45 |
#4 I only like white bread. Wonder Bread Power! Down with the sub-breads! Long live the Bimbo white bread race!!! /libtardviewofeverythingtheydon'tlike |
Posted by: DarthVader 2018-04-04 15:57 |
#3 Don't worry Roth, its not racist to hate white bread. Now not liking Black or Rye.., Unleavened or Gluten free would definitely be racist! Not to mention the 4,302 other genders of... bread. |
Posted by: CrazyFool 2018-04-04 12:52 |
#2 Roth LaDoad quietly moves into first place in the race for.... Snark of the Day. |
Posted by: Chererong Lumumba5826 2018-04-04 12:46 |
#1 Oh, no! Now the world knows I don't like white bread! |
Posted by: Roth LaDoad 2018-04-04 12:44 |