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    Uber breached by hacker in cybersecurity incident

    SAN FRANCISCO — Uber’s computer systems were breached and the company has alerted authorities, the ride-hailing giant said Thursday.

    The ride-hailing company said in a tweet that it was “responding to a cybersecurity incident.”

    The hacker surfaced in a message posted in Slack, according to two people familiar with the matter, who spoke on the condition of anonymity because of the sensitive nature of the incident.

    “I announce i am a hacker and uber has suffered a data breach,” the message said.

    It was followed by a flurry of reaction emoji, including several dozen showing what appeared to be a siren symbols. Because of the hack, the people said, some systems including Slack and internal tools were temporarily disabled.

    Internal screenshots obtained by The Washington Post showed the hacker claiming to have wide-ranging access insider Uber’s corporate networks and appeared to indicate the hacker was motivated by the company’s treatment of its drivers. The person claimed to have taken data from common software used by Uber employees to write new programs.

    Uber pointed to its tweeted statement when asked for comment on the matter. The company did not immediately respond to questions about the extent to which internal information may have been compromised.

    Uber waits a year to report massive hack of customer data

    The New York Times first reported the incident.

    Uber previously suffered a breach in 2016 that exposed personal information of 57 million people around the world, including names, email addresses and phone numbers. It also included drivers license info from roughly 600,000 U.S. drivers. Two individuals accessed the information via “a third-party cloud-based service” used by Uber at the time.

    Uber, which is based in San Francisco, employs thousands of people globally who may have been affected by the hacker’s obstruction of systems. The company has also come under fire for its treatment of drivers, who it has fought to keep as contractors.

    The hacker posted as Uber on a chat function at HackerOne, which runs interference between researchers who are reporting security vulnerabilities and the companies who are affected by them. Uber and other companies use that service to manage reports of security flaws in its programs and to reward researchers who find them.

    In that chat, which was viewed by The Post, the alleged hacker claimed access to Uber’s Amazon Web Services account.

    What to do if you’re hacked

    AWS did not immediately respond to a request for comment. (Amazon founder Jeff Bezos owns The Post.)

    In a subsequent interview on a messaging app, the alleged hacker told The Post that they had breached the company for fun and might leak source code “in a few months.”

    The person described Uber security as “awful.”

    Peiter “Mudge” Zatko’s journey from hacker to Twitter whistleblower

    Uber employees were caught off guard by the sudden disruption to their workday, and some initially reacted to the alarming messages as if they were a joke, according to the screenshots.

    The hacker’s ominous posts were met with reactions apparently depicting the SpongeBob character Mr. Krabs, the popular “It’s Happening” GIF and queries as to whether the situation was a prank.

    “Sorry to be a stick in the mud, but I think IT would appreciate less memes while they handle the breach,” one message viewed by The Post said.

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