Ticketmaster is facing scrutiny after a significant data breach affecting half a billion customers. An Australian cybersecurity expert described Ticketmaster's silence on the matter as 'troubling'. The breach is reportedly linked to the same group responsible for previous incidents. Additionally, Snowflake has observed an increase in cyber threat activity targeting its customers' accounts, with over 400 companies' data potentially compromised. Both Ticketmaster and Santander are confirmed to use Snowflake's cloud storage services, which may have contributed to the breaches. The live-venue ticketing company is under pressure, and BLEEPINGCOMPUTER confirmed the involvement of Snowflake's services.
More on $SNOW hack from BLEEPINGCOMPUTER: BleepingComputer was able to confirm that both Santander and Ticketmaster are using Snowflake's cloud storage services. $LYV
This is a wild ride. Snowflake breached and scraped of over 400 companies data. Ticketmaster and Santander leaks this week seem to be tied to this. @vxunderground and @GossiTheDog putting out great content on it. https://t.co/ehXI5Xmzbg
Snowflake recently observed and is investigating an increase in cyber threat activity targeting some of customers’ accounts https://t.co/ph3ja5XoEp
The security breach, if confirmed, would be another blow to the live-venue ticketing company. https://t.co/MSdSmKMkvr
Same crew as the Ticketmaster breach. Geez, that’s some big dollars right there. https://t.co/xRVXQjx5Yr
Ticketmaster’s silence on the data breach that has affected half a billion customers is “troubling”, an Australian cybersecurity expert says. > https://t.co/lxN7iAbnve https://t.co/9VE4UwHKtm