Bouygues Telecom, the third-largest telephone provider in France, has confirmed a cyberattack and information breach affecting thousands and thousands of its clients.
In an announcement posted to its web site, the telecommunications large mentioned the hack allowed the intruders to entry the non-public info on 6.4 million buyer accounts. Bouygues mentioned it detected the cyberattack on August 4, however didn’t give a timeframe for when the breach was remediated.
In a separate web page devoted to victims of the cyberattack, Bouygues mentioned the stolen information consists of clients’ contact info and contractual information, their civil standing (or firm information if the subscriber is knowledgeable), in addition to IBANs, or worldwide checking account numbers.
Bouygues mentioned it has about 26.9 million cellular clients.
The cyberattack has been reported to France’s information safety company, CNIL.
On the time of publication, Bouygues’ webpage concerning the cyberattack contained a hidden “noindex” tag in its supply code, which instructs serps to disregard the web page, making it troublesome for anybody looking out the net to seek out the web page.
A spokesperson for Bouygues didn’t instantly reply to a request for remark asking for particulars concerning the cyberattack, or clarify why the web page was hidden from serps.
Information of the breach comes quickly after a cyberattack at French telecom large Orange, the nation’s largest telephone provider and one of many largest telecommunication firms on this planet. On July 29, Orange advised clients to count on disruption because it moved to “isolate doubtlessly affected providers.” Orange serves greater than 290 million clients worldwide.








