Sony defends notification delay in data fiasco

Sony defends notification delay in data fiasco

PlayStation maker claims it took a week to investigate seriousness of data theft.

Sony has defended the length of time it took to disclose the massive data breach that left the personal details of up to 77 million customers in the hands of data thieves.

The Japanese gaming giant last night admitted that an ongoing outage on the PlayStation Network was down to a massive system breach, but the company sparked fury for delaying the announcement for a week.

Sony says the delay - following the intrusion between 17 April and 19 April - was necessary to give the company time to investigate the scale of the theft and to assess what information had been targeted.

“We learned there was an intrusion [on] 19 April and subsequently shut the services down. We then brought in outside experts to help us learn how the intrusion occurred and to conduct an investigation to determine the nature and scope of the incident,” Patrick Seybold, corporate communications and social media director, said on the PlayStation blog.

“It was necessary to conduct several days of forensic analysis, and it took our experts until yesterday to understand the scope of the breach. We then shared that information with our consumers and announced it publicly this afternoon.”

However, Sony's tone did little to placate consumers, who felt they should have been alerted sooner – especially given that credit-card details may have been compromised.

“Five days to come to the conclusion that credit-card data might have been compromised seems about four days too long,” posted Ratchet426 on the website.

“If there was enough of a perceived breach to shut the entire service down on the 19th I can’t imagine that a credit-card data breach wasn’t also considered at the same time.”

This article originally appeared at pcpro.co.uk

Source: Copyright © PC Pro, Dennis Publishing

See more about:  sony  |  defends  |  notification  |  delay  |  data  |  fiasco
 
 

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Comments: 9
kevin_watters
28 April 2011
Hmmm... funny how they never contacted anyone that may have been affected. Im on the PS Network... as were my credit card details... and I've never been contacted by email to say there was a possible theft of my data.


Comment made about the PC & Tech Authority article:
Sony defends notification delay in data fiasco?
PlayStation maker claims it took a week to investigate seriousness of data theft.

What do you think? Join the discussion.
Slatts
28 April 2011
That's probably just Sony being a good corporate citizen.:-k

They didn't want to stress the internet with 70 odd million emails.

:d
kevin_watters
28 April 2011
LOL I just read in the news (Courier Mail) that Sony HAS apparently "contacted ALL 70+ million users of the network to inform them of the risk to their credit cards". Funny that... NOBODY I know has received that email. Has anyone on here ??
kevin_watters
28 April 2011
The news link is here :http://www.couriermail.com.au/news/breaking-news/sony-working-with-cops-on-playstation/story-e6freoo6-1226046336422
Slatts
28 April 2011
kevin_watters wrote:
LOL I just read in the news (Courier Mail) that Sony HAS apparently "contacted ALL 70+ million users of the network to inform them of the risk to their credit cards". Funny that... NOBODY I know has received that email. Has anyone on here ??


Most of them probably got caught by spam filters.

If I was an ISP, I'd set up my filter to grab anything that started coming through in bunches of a thousand or more..:-k

Particularly if it all originated from the one IP address.



Edited by Slatts: 28/4/2011 03:27:21 PM
macka71
28 April 2011
I got my email today. Not really impressed that my details are out there but can't blame Sony, just those mongrels who stole the data.
Slatts
28 April 2011
macka71 wrote:
I got my email today. Not really impressed that my details are out there but can't blame Sony, just those mongrels who stole the data.


Oh, I don't know macka, Most companies manage to keep their credit card and personal information firewalled from their site OK.

And then there's the 1 week delay before notifying their customers.

Yes, I think I could blame Sony.

Arrogant bastards.

.:Cyb3rGlitch:.
28 April 2011
+1 Slatts. I mean, it's one thing to have an insecure network, and another to not have the data encrypted. Then to not tell anybody for a while... that's pretty lax.

Also, think of the people who bought Portal 2!
andreq
29 April 2011
"We greatly appreciate your patience, understanding and goodwill as we do whatever it takes to resolve these issues as quickly and efficiently as practicable."

I got the email as well. loved the part where they said they appreciated my understanding........I understand they got hacked and compromised 77million peoples details and possibly financial information........ Sure I understand that.....just like I would be understanding if my bank suddenly lost track of 77million customer details.....that sort of understanding................Ex Sony Customer.



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