Carnival Cruise hit by data breach, warns of data misuse risk

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Carnival Cruise hit by data breach, warns of data misuse risk

Carnival Corporation, the world's largest cruise ship operator, has disclosed a data breach after attackers breached some email accounts and accessed personal, financial, and health information belonging to customers, employees, and crew.

Carnival is included in both S&P 500 and FTSE 100 stock market indices, has more than 150,000 employees in roughly 150 countries, and provides leisure travel to roughly 13 million guests each year.

The company operates nine of the world's leading cruise line brands (Carnival Cruise Line, Costa, P&O Australia, P&O Cruises, Princess Cruises, Holland American Line, AIDA, Cunard, and Seabourn) and a travel tour company (Holland America Princess Alaska Tours).

Data misuse risk warning

"Unauthorized third-party access to a limited number of email accounts was detected on March 19, 2021," the cruise line operator giant says in a data breach notification letter recently sent to affected customers.

"It appears that in mid-March, the unauthorized third-party gained access to certain personal information relating to some of our guests, employees, and crew.

"The impacted information includes data routinely collected during the guest experience and travel booking process or through the course of employment or providing services to the Company, including COVID or other safety testing."

According to Carnival, the accessed information included names, addresses, phone numbers, passport numbers, dates of birth, health information, and, in some limited instances, additional personal information like Social Security or national identification numbers.

The cruise line operator also warned impacted customers, employees, and crew that they found evidence indicating "a low likelihood of the data being misused."

A Carnival spokesperson was not available for comment when contacted by BleepingComputer earlier today for clarification on the reason behind this warning and more details on the incident.

Hit by ransomware twice in one year

BleepingComputer previously reported that a ransomware attack also hit Carnival in August 2020, an incident confirmed by the cruise line operator in an 8-K form filed with the US Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC).

Two months later, Carnival said in a separate SEC filling the ransomware gang behind the August attack gained access to the personal information of both customers and employees during the attack.

Roughly 37,500 individuals were impacted affected by the August ransomware attack, according to info filed by Carnival with the Office of Maine's Attorney General.

The August ransomware attack came after a data breach disclosed in March 2020 that also led to the exposure of customers' personal and financial info after threat actors gained access to Carnival employees' email accounts.

In December 2020, Carnival was hit by a second (previously undisclosed) ransomware attack with "investigation and remediation phases" still ongoing, according to a 10-Q form filed with the SEC in April 2021.

"There is currently no indication of any misuse of information potentially accessed or acquired and we continue to work with regulators to bring these matters and other reportable incidents to conclusion," Carnival said about the December 2020 ransomware incident.

BleepingComputer reported at the time that the German cruise line and Carnival subsidiary AIDA Cruises was dealing with mysterious "IT restrictions" that led to the cancellation of their New Year's Eve cruises.

Costa Crociere, another Carnival subsidiary, was also affected by an IT outage around the December ransomware attack that prevented customers from booking trips via the cruise line's online reservation system.

AIDA Cruises, Costa Crociere, and Carnival Corporation did not reply to BleepingComputer emails regarding the disruptions and trip cancellations.

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