More than 300,000 Australians have been hit in another corporate cyber attack. The hackers stole drivers licences and customer data from 'Latitude Financial', which offers buy-now-pay-later finance through some of our biggest retailers. 7NEWS
United States Latest News, United States Headlines
Similar News:You can also read news stories similar to this one that we have collected from other news sources.
Latitude Financial hacked, 328,000 customer IDs feared stolenBREAKING: Consumer finance provider Latitude Financial said it has been the victim of a hacking incident and believes identification documents of 328,000 customers were stolen - including the drivers licence details of around 100,000 customers.
Read more »
328,000 Latitude Financial customers hackedAustralian consumer finance provider Latitude Financial said it believes 328,000 customers' identification documents were stolen during a sophisticated and malicious cyberattack. The firm said more than 100,000 copies of customers' IDs plus 225,000 customer records were stolen in the hack. Latitude provides consumer finance services to Harvey Norman, JB Hi-FI, Apple and David Jones.
Read more »
Latitude Financial hacked, 328,000 customer IDs feared stolenThe consumer finance outfit provides services to Harvey Norman, JB Hi-Fi, Apple, The Good Guys and recently signed up David Jones.
Read more »
Latitude Financial hit by cyber attack, more than 300,000 identity documents stolenBuy now, pay later and finance company Latitude has revealed hackers have stolen more than 300,000 personal identity documents.
Read more »
Latitude Financial hacked, 328,000 customer IDs feared stolenThe consumer finance outfit provides services to Harvey Norman, JB Hi-Fi, Apple, The Good Guys and recently signed up David Jones.
Read more »
Latitude Financial fall victim to a ‘sophisticated cyber-attack’Sky News Political Reporter Joel Philp says financial services company Latitude Financial became victims of a “sophisticated cyber-attack' in which 330,000 customer records were stolen. Customers have reported that criminals are racking up debt and spending thousands of dollars in their name, Mr Philp told Sky News Australia.
Read more »