Hackers broke into a database with data on hundreds of millions of airline tickets

Hackers broke into a database with data on hundreds of millions of airline tickets

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Hackers, presumably acting in the interests of Ukraine, gained access to the databases of the Russian company “Syrena-Travel”. It contains information about airline passengers and their insurance policies, the data covers the period from 2007 to 2023. This is reported by the “Vazhney istorii” edition with a link to the Telegram channel of the hacker community KibOrg.

It is claimed that some group of Muppets, which is connected with KibOrg, is behind the hack. It is not clear whether this group is connected to any governments or special services.

Hackers posted fragments of the two databases they obtained. “Vazhnye istorii” writes that they discovered in these fragments data about the flights of the former head of the Austrian Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Karin Kneisl, who now lives in Russia, and these data coincide with the reports of Kneisl herself about her movements.

The “Sirena Travel” databases contain information about all reservations and sales of air tickets in Russia, about baggage registration, insurance policies, and so on. As the hackers write, the two databases contain 664.6 million records with personal data of passengers, flight numbers, routes, tariffs, and data on ticket prices. In addition, there are almost 3.5 billion records of passenger phone numbers in the databases.

The “Important Histories” source in the hacker group claims that KibOrg does not plan to put the entire database into open access. The group is considering the possibility of transferring the base to the Armed Forces of Ukraine, selling data for money, as well as transferring reports to investigative journalists.

Alexei Navalny’s associate Georgy Alburov claims that he found a ticket in the database confirming the recent flight of the head of the “National Media Group” Alina Kabaeva from Minsk to Moscow. “I hope that we and other investigators will be able to get access to this data. There will be enough material for several lifetimes,” — writes Alburov.



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