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France fines unemployment agency €5 million over data breach. The French data protection authority fined the national employment agency €5 million (nearly €6 million) for failing to secure job seekers' data, which allowed hackers to steal the personal information of 43 million people. France Travail (formerly known as Pôle Emploi) is the country's public employment service, providing unemployment benefits and helping job seekers find work. The agency also maintains extensive databases containing personal and financial information for millions of French citizens. The National Commission on Informatics and Liberty (CNIL) imposed the penalty on France Travail following a data breach in early 2024 that exposed job seekers' personal information spanning 20 years. In March 2024, the French government agency disclosed that the attackers stole the sensitive data of up to 43 million individuals, including their names, dates of birth, national insurance numbers, email and home addresses, and phone numbers. However, the data breach didn't affect bank details or account passwords, and the hackers didn't obtain complete job-seeker files, which may also have contained sensitive health data. "In the first quarter of 2024, one or more hackers managed to hack into the FRANCE TRAVAIL information system. They used techniques known as 'social engineering,' which involve exploiting people's trust, ignorance or credulity," the CNIL said on Thursday. "This method enabled them to hijack the accounts of CAP EMPLOI advisers, i.e. the organisations responsible for supporting, monitoring and upholding the employment of people with disabilities." The data protection watchdog also ordered France Travail to document corrective measures and to provide a detailed implementation schedule. Failure to comply with CNIL's order will result in daily penalties of €5,000 until the government agency demonstrates that it has remedied its security issues. In August 2023, France Travail suffered another massive data breach affecting approximately 10 million individuals, exposing their full names and social security numbers. Last year, CNIL also slapped Google with a €325 million ($378 million) fine for violating cookie regulations and imposed a €150 million ($174 million) fine on Shein's Irish subsidiary for similar violations of the General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR). More recently, it fined Free Mobile and its parent company €42 million after an October 2024 data breach for failing to protect customer data against cyber threats. Secrets Security Cheat Sheet: From Sprawl to Control Whether you're cleaning up old keys or setting guardrails for AI-generated code, this guide helps your team build securely from the start. Get the cheat sheet and take the guesswork out of secrets management.

Daily Brief Summary

DATA BREACH // France Travail Fined €5 Million for Massive Data Breach Incident

The French data protection authority fined France Travail €5 million for a data breach that compromised the personal information of 43 million job seekers.

The breach involved unauthorized access to sensitive data, including names, dates of birth, and national insurance numbers, but did not affect bank details or account passwords.

Hackers exploited social engineering techniques to hijack accounts of CAP EMPLOI advisers, impacting the agency's ability to safeguard personal information.

France Travail is required to document corrective measures and provide a detailed implementation schedule to avoid further penalties.

Failure to comply with CNIL's orders will result in daily fines of €5,000 until security issues are addressed.

This incident follows a previous breach in August 2023, affecting 10 million individuals, highlighting ongoing security challenges for France Travail.

The CNIL has a history of imposing substantial fines for data protection failures, as seen with recent penalties against Google and Free Mobile.