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According to the CyberX9 report, the vulnerability exposed postpaid customers’ call data records, comprising the time when a call was made, duration of call, location from which the call was made, customer’s full name and address, SMS details comprising contact number to which it was sent, among others.
CyberX9 founder and Managing Director Himanshu Pathak told PTI that the firm had shared entire findings with Vodafone Idea through email and a company official had acknowledged the vulnerability on August 24.
Pathak said CyberX9 reported details to Vi on August 22. ”Later on August 22, 2022, Vi confirmed the receipt of our report. Vodafone Idea acknowledged the vulnerabilities discovered and reported by us on August 24, 2022,” Pathak said.
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”We regularly conduct checks and audits to further strengthen our security framework. We learnt about a potential vulnerability in billing communication. This was immediately fixed and a thorough forensic analysis was conducted to ascertain no data breach,” it said.
The company further said that it has notified about the potential vulnerability to appropriate agencies and made due disclosures, adding, ”Vi customer data remains fully safe and secure.”
The company has also made disclosure of the vulnerability on its website.
However, CyberX9 has contested the claim. ”Vi was exposing millions of customers call logs and other sensitive data for at least last about two years. In that massive time period, multiple criminal hackers might have stolen this data.
”It is absurd and baseless claim of Vi that they’ve done a forensic audit and no breach was found. Such a detailed forensic audit would at least take couple of months to be done,” CyberX9 said.
The CyberX9 report claimed that data of around 301 million people was exposed due to this vulnerability. CyberX9 found that call data records of 20.6 million Vi postpaid customers was exposed. This comprised personal data, call records, SMS records, internet usage records and roaming details.
The cyber security firm claimed that personal data of 55 million people, including those who have left Vi and those who only showed interest in getting a Vi connection, was at risk.