Illustration by Alex Castro / The Verge

Uber admitted to covering up a massive cybersecurity attack that took place in October 2016, exposing the confidential data of 57 million customers and drivers, as part of a settlement with the US Department of Justice to avoid criminal prosecution.

In order to not be prosecuted for the cover-up, Uber “admits that its personnel failed to report the November 2016 data breach to the [Federal Trade Commission] despite a pending FTC investigation into data security at the company,” according to a press release from the DOJ.

Hackers used stolen credentials to access a private source code repository and obtain a proprietary access key

Hackers used stolen credentials to access a private source code repository and obtain a proprietary access…

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