Thursday, December 18, 2025
ADVT 
International

76 mn accounts hacked in August: JP Morgan Chase

Darpan News Desk IANS, 03 Oct, 2014 10:24 AM
  • 76 mn accounts hacked in August: JP Morgan Chase
US banking giant JP Morgan Chase has issued updated information about a cyber attack which it suffered in August and that approximately 76 million current accounts and seven million small enterprises were affected.
 
In an official document presented before the US Security and Exchange Commission Thursday, the bank specified the type of data that was breached in the attack on the web and mobile application of JP Morgan Chase & Co.
 
The information accessed by the hackers included names, addresses, telephone numbers and e-mail addresses of its clients, as well as internal information of the company.
 
However, the bank has not yet registered evidence of this data theft affecting the number of accounts, access codes, identity card numbers, dates of birth or social security numbers.
 
Although the investigations continue, the bank has not had any proof yet showing that a fraud related to this data theft has occurred, but they have been calling their clients to inform them if they face any irregularity.
 
"The company continues to monitor and control the situation and investigate the matter. Also, the bank is completely cooperating with all the investigative government agencies," the document said.
 
JP Morgan Chase was one of the five American entities victimised by an attack, the purpose of which is still unknown and which remains subject to a thorough investigation.
 
The Federal Bureau of Investigation has been trying to determine the origin of such a sophisticated cyber attack and if the motive was economic or part of an intelligence operation.
 
"Companies of our size unfortunately experience cyber attacks nearly everyday. We have multiple layers of defence to counteract any threats and constantly monitor fraud levels," said Patricia Wexler, JP Morgan spokesperson.
 
The American banking sector has been a target of frequent hacking in the last few years, and most of the attacks had an economic motive. That is why this case, which does not seem to be of the same profile, has caused special concern to the authorities.

MORE International ARTICLES

Salman Rushdie gets Denmark's top literature award

Salman Rushdie gets Denmark's top literature award
Indian-born British author Salman Rushdie received Sunday a literary award named after Denmark's famous poet and fairy tale writer Hans Christian Andersen...

Salman Rushdie gets Denmark's top literature award

Indian-origin scientist measures rare black hole

Indian-origin scientist measures rare black hole
A team of astronomers led by an Indian-origin astrophysicist has succeeded in accurately measuring - and thus confirming the existence of - a black...

Indian-origin scientist measures rare black hole

Snow cover on Arctic sea ice has thinned significantly: NASA

Snow cover on Arctic sea ice has thinned significantly: NASA
In an alarming revelation, NASA has confirmed that the snow on sea ice in the Arctic has thinned significantly in the last 50 years - by about a third in the western...

Snow cover on Arctic sea ice has thinned significantly: NASA

Major quake jolts Iranian city

Major quake jolts Iranian city
According to official, the aftershocks could be felt in neighbouring provinces of Lorestan, Khuzestan and Markazi....

Major quake jolts Iranian city

Missouri Shooting Case: Holder Orders Federal Autopsy, Citing 'Extraordinary Circumstances'

Missouri Shooting Case: Holder Orders Federal Autopsy, Citing 'Extraordinary Circumstances'
U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder on Sunday ordered a federal medical examiner to perform another autopsy on the body of a black Missouri teenager whose fatal shooting by a white police officer has spurred a week of rancorous and sometimes violent protests in suburban St. Louis.

Missouri Shooting Case: Holder Orders Federal Autopsy, Citing 'Extraordinary Circumstances'

Prosecutor Says 2 Sisters Sexually Abused After Abduction From New York Farm Stand

Prosecutor Says 2 Sisters Sexually Abused After Abduction From New York Farm Stand
CANTON, N.Y. - Two young sisters were sexually abused after their abduction from a roadside farm stand in New York state, a prosecutor said Saturday.

Prosecutor Says 2 Sisters Sexually Abused After Abduction From New York Farm Stand