A security breach of Uber Technologies temporarily hobbled the ride-hailing company’s internal communications in one of the starkest illustrations of how tech companies that have access to the best talent and tools are vulnerable to repeated compromise.

Uber on Friday morning said it was continuing to investigate the incident, which began Thursday and prompted the company to take the preventive measure of suspending employee access to internal systems including Slack, Zoom and Gmail. Access to those systems was being restored as of Friday morning, the company said, adding that it had notified law enforcement and that it had no evidence that the incident involved access to “sensitive user data” such as riders’ trip histories.

This post first appeared on wsj.com

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

You May Also Like

Why a Zara Bet Big on the Maxi Dress This Summer

By Trefor Moss | Photographs by Caitlin Chescoe for The Wall Street…

U.S., Taiwan Move Closer to Trade, Investment Agreement

World Asia Taipei officials welcome release of draft statements, with both sides…

The ‘Fifty Shades of Grey’ Author Finishes What She Started (and Restarted)

Exactly. And that’s what it’s like writing fan fiction. It’s so funny…

Wisconsin teen sentenced to 20 years for torture death of 7-year-old

A Wisconsin teen was sentenced to 20 years in prison for the…