Alleged Ticketmaster, Live Nation Breach With Over Millions Compromised
A group of hackers is claiming that they have accessed the personal data of millions of Ticketmaster and Live Nation customers. According to multiple sources, the ShinyHunters hacking group has shared the details of an alleged hack of the company and is selling the data for a one-time price of $500,000.
A report from Hackread claims that a group known as ShinyHunters published a 1.3TB database of compromised customer data, on the newly-reopened BreachForums criminal site.
They said the database contained sensitive information on 560 million users. This information includes payment data but also contains people’s names, postal addresses, email addresses, phone numbers, ticket sales and event details, order information, and even partial payment card data, for sale. The partial payment card data includes cardholder names, the last four digits of the cards, expiration dates, and some customer fraud details.
Information found there could be used in different ways, including phishing attacks, identity theft, and more. Ticketmaster users may want to take a few minutes to change their passwords.
TechRadar Pro reported that before offering the database for sale, ShinyHunters reached out to Ticketmaster-Live Nation in an “extortion attempt,” the group told Hackread – however the company allegedly did not respond to the group’s attempt to communicate.
The outlet pointed out that the timing of the leak is quite “curious,” given the recent relaunch of BreachForums, one of the “most popular underground hacking forums in the world.” Specifically, just weeks after it was seized by the FBI, one of its key administrators, who goes by the alias Baphomet, was allegedly arrested.
They also mention that the other key administrator was ShinyHunters, who apparently bragged about being out of the FBI’s reach in this case.
Some speculate that the breach might be a publicity stunt to get hackers interested in the new forum.
Ticketmaster – Live Nation Can’t Seem to Shake The Headlines
This comes at an especially bad time for Ticketmaster and Live Nation. As we've reported, about a week ago, the U.S. Department of Justice and 30 states filed a lawsuit against Live Nation Entertainment, which owns Ticketmaster. The lawsuit alleges that the ticketing giant has an illegal monopoly over the live music industry. The 128-page lawsuit was filed in federal court in the Southern District of New York on May 23.
The Live Nation lawsuit details the ticketing giant’s massive influence and control over the live music industry. It says Live Nation has “strategically acquired a number of smaller and regional promoters that it had internally identified as threats,” which has “undermined competition and impacted artist compensation.”
By doing this, the lawsuit claims Live Nation has unique control over concert ticket prices, as well as their highly controversial add-on fees, ranging from “Platinum” or “VIP” fees, “service” of “convenience” fees, and “facility” fees.
Additionally, the lawsuit states Live Nation “locks concert venues into long-term exclusive contracts so that venues cannot consider or choose rival ticketers or switch to better, more, or cost-effective ticketing technology.”
Recently, singer and songwriter Jon Bellion revealed the alleged pitfalls of his former deal with Live Nation. He disclosed the inner workings of his former deal on YouTube’s The George Janko Show.
“Basically, I got to a place in my career, we sold out 10,000 people at Jones Beach, I mean, it was the height of everything for me and it was right around the time I figured out how my Live Nation contract worked,” Bellion recalled at the 13:02 mark in the video linked above. “It was right around the time I figured out how my record deal actually worked.”
The singer could not understand why he was expected to pay off his advance when there were so many alleged loopholes being exploited by Live Nation. He recalled his deal being contingent on “hard ticket sales,” while the live entertainment company solely profited off of a concept known as “peanuts, parking, and alcohol” that delivered a far greater financial haul than what Bellion was seeing.