Saturday, January 11, 2025
Homecyber securityHertz Car Rental Platform Leaks 60,000 Insurance Claim Reports

Hertz Car Rental Platform Leaks 60,000 Insurance Claim Reports

Published on

Hertz, a well-known car rental company, has inadvertently exposed over 60,000 insurance claim reports.

This breach has raised serious concerns about the company’s data security practices and left customers questioning the safety of their personal information.

Discovery of the Breach

The breach came to light when a customer received an unexpected email from Hertz regarding a rental record for a vehicle damaged.

unexpected email
an unexpected email from Hertz regarding a rental record for a damaged vehicle.

The email appeared legitimate, with the correct domain and professional formatting. However, it contained a suspicious link leading to an unfamiliar site, htzra.com, which was later identified as a phishing site.

Upon further investigation, it was revealed that this site was collecting sensitive information through a form disguised as an accident report submission.

Vulnerability Exploited

The root cause of this data exposure was a classic access control vulnerability known as Indirect Object Reference.

Decoding Compliance: What CISOs Need to Know – Join Free Webinar

This flaw allowed unauthorized users to access other customers’ accident reports simply by altering the URL.

Indirect Object Reference
Indirect Object Reference

The exposed reports contained personal information such as names, addresses, phone numbers, and ages of the affected individuals. Fortunately, only a small percentage of these reports included more detailed information.

Exposed reports contained personal information
Exposed reports contained personal information

Response and Mitigation

Upon discovering the breach, cybersecurity firm Adversis reported the issue to Hertz. The company swiftly shut down the compromised domain and restricted access to the leaked information.

According to a timeline provided by Adversis, the breach was identified and reported on September 5, 2024, and by September 13, 2024, CERT confirmed that the domain was no longer accessible.

Hertz has since issued a statement acknowledging the breach and assuring customers that it is taking steps to enhance its security measures.

They have also contacted affected customers to inform them of the incident and provide guidance on protecting their personal information.

This incident has highlighted significant vulnerabilities in Hertz’s data handling practices and underscores the importance of robust cybersecurity measures in protecting customer information.

Customers are advised to remain vigilant for suspicious communications and monitor their accounts for unusual activity.

Some customers may consider opting for companies with established bug bounty programs or stronger security protocols for future rentals.

This breach reminds us of the potential risks associated with sharing personal information online and the need for companies to prioritize data protection.

Are You From SOC/DFIR Teams? - Try Advanced Malware and Phishing Analysis With ANY.RUN - 14-day free trial

Divya
Divya
Divya is a Senior Journalist at GBhackers covering Cyber Attacks, Threats, Breaches, Vulnerabilities and other happenings in the cyber world.

Latest articles

QSC: Multi-Plugin Malware Framework Installs Backdoor on Windows

The QSC Loader service DLL named "loader.dll" leverages two distinct methods to obtain the...

Weaponized LDAP Exploit Deploys Information-Stealing Malware

Cybercriminals are exploiting the recent critical LDAP vulnerabilities (CVE-2024-49112 and CVE-2024-49113) by distributing fake...

New NonEuclid RAT Evades Antivirus and Encrypts Critical Files

A NonEuclid sophisticated C# Remote Access Trojan (RAT) designed for the.NET Framework 4.8 has...

Hackers Targeting Users Who Lodged Complaints On Government portal To Steal Credit Card Data

Fraudsters in the Middle East are exploiting a vulnerability in the government services portal....

API Security Webinar

72 Hours to Audit-Ready API Security

APIs present a unique challenge in this landscape, as risk assessment and mitigation are often hindered by incomplete API inventories and insufficient documentation.

Join Vivek Gopalan, VP of Products at Indusface, in this insightful webinar as he unveils a practical framework for discovering, assessing, and addressing open API vulnerabilities within just 72 hours.

Discussion points

API Discovery: Techniques to identify and map your public APIs comprehensively.
Vulnerability Scanning: Best practices for API vulnerability analysis and penetration testing.
Clean Reporting: Steps to generate a clean, audit-ready vulnerability report within 72 hours.

More like this

QSC: Multi-Plugin Malware Framework Installs Backdoor on Windows

The QSC Loader service DLL named "loader.dll" leverages two distinct methods to obtain the...

Weaponized LDAP Exploit Deploys Information-Stealing Malware

Cybercriminals are exploiting the recent critical LDAP vulnerabilities (CVE-2024-49112 and CVE-2024-49113) by distributing fake...

New NonEuclid RAT Evades Antivirus and Encrypts Critical Files

A NonEuclid sophisticated C# Remote Access Trojan (RAT) designed for the.NET Framework 4.8 has...