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Sony confirms data breach impacting thousands in the U.S.. Sony Interactive Entertainment (Sony) has notified current and former employees and their family members about a cybersecurity breach that exposed personal information. The company sent the data breach notification to about 6,800 individuals, confirming that the intrusion occurred after an unauthorized party exploited a zero-day vulnerability in the MOVEit Transfer platform. The zero-day is CVE-2023-34362, a critical-severity SQL injection flaw that leads to remote code execution, leveraged by the Clop ransomware in large-scale attacks that compromised numerous organizations across the world. Clop ransomware gang added Sony Group to its list of victims in late June. However, the firm did not provide a public statement until now. According to the data breach notification, the compromise happened on May 28, three days before Sony learned from Progress Software (the MOVEit vendor) about the flaw, but it was discovered in early June. “On June 2, 2023, [we] discovered the unauthorized downloads, immediately took the platform offline, and remediated the vulnerability,” reads the notice. “An investigation was then launched with assistance from external cybersecurity experts. We also notified law enforcement,” Sony says in the data breach notification. Sony says the incident was limited to the particular software platform and had no impact on any of its other systems. Still, sensitive information belonging to 6,791 people in the U.S. was compromised. The firm has individually determined the exposed details and listed them in each individual letter, but it is censored in the notification sample submitted to the Office of the Maine Attorney General. The notification recipients are now offered credit monitoring and identity restoration services through Equifax, which they can access by using their unique code until February 29, 2024. Sony’s more recent breach Late last month, following allegations on hacking forums that Sony had been breached again and 3.14 GB of data had been stolen from the company’s systems, the firm responded by saying it was investigating the claims. The leaked dataset that at least two separate threat actors held, contained details for the SonarQube platform, certificates, Creators Cloud, incident response policies, a device emulator for generating licenses, and more. A Sony spokesperson shared with BleepingComputer the statement below, which confirms a limited security breach: Sony has been investigating recent public claims of a security incident at Sony. We are working with third-party forensics experts and have identified activity on a single server located in Japan used for internal testing for the Entertainment, Technology and Services (ET&S) business. Sony has taken this server offline while the investigation is ongoing. There is currently no indication that customer or business partner data was stored on the affected server or that any other Sony systems were affected. There has been no adverse impact on Sony's operations. This confirms that Sony has suffered two security breaches in the past four months.

Daily Brief Summary

DATA BREACH // Sony Interactive Entertainment Confirms Major Data Breach

Sony Interactive Entertainment (Sony) has acknowledged a cybersecurity breach affecting around 6,800 individuals. The breach exposed personal information of current and former employees and their family members.

The breach resulted from exploitation of a zero-day vulnerability within Sony's MOVEit Transfer platform. The vulnerability has been leveraged in wider attacks by the Clop ransomware gang.

The intrusion took place on May 28, and was discovered on June 2 when unauthorized downloads were found. The platform was immediately taken offline and the vulnerability has since been remediated.

The impact of the incident was limited to the MOVEit Transfer platform with no effect on other Sony systems. However, sensitive information related to 6,791 US individuals was compromised.

Recipients of the data breach notification are being offered Equifax credit monitoring and identity restoration services. The services can be accessed until February 29, 2024.

Sony experienced another security breach last month resulting in the theft of 3.14GB of data from the company's systems. Sony has confirmed limited security breaches in two different incidents within the last four months.