Tesla: Employee probably passed on 100 GB of data

B2B Cyber ​​Security ShortNews

Share post

According to a report by the Handelsblatt, a former Tesla employee claims to have stolen 100 GB of data and handed it over to the editors. Informat accuses Tesla of protecting its data and that of its customers too poorly. Tesla did not respond to the questions from the Handelsblatt, but only made its own statement.

Apparently Tesla doesn't use protection technology like DLP - Data Leakage Prevention or it doesn't work very well. Tesla wrote to the Handelsblatt that a disgruntled employee had illegally stolen data from the group. The ex-Tesla employee handed over a total of 100 GB of data, which probably came from the project planning area, to the Handelsblatt. His intention: the Tesla Group would only adequately protect its data and that of all customers against unauthorized access or attacks. With his data theft he probably wants to prove how easy it is at Tesla.

100 GB of real Tesla data?

Tesla only responded briefly to a request from the Handelsblatt. The data was stolen by a disgruntled former employee. The former service technician is said to have abused his access. This is how he is said to have exfiltrated the information. That was Tesla's answer from corporate lawyer Joseph Alm. Tesla wanted to take legal action. However, Tesla did not respond to further questions asked by the Handelsblatt. However, the lawyer's response suggests that the data supplied is genuine.

Tesla demands data protection from the Handelsblatt

Teslas hasn't answered a single question from the Handelsblatt, but that doesn't stop the group from explaining the GDPR to the Handelsblatt. The lawyer wrote:

“As you know, the use of illegally obtained data for media reporting is only permissible in exceptional circumstances. Possessing such data without justification violates, among other things, data protection law. And improper handling of this information exposes recipients such as the Handelsblatt to liability for breaches of trade secrets, data protection laws and the handling of stolen data, among other things. If such sensitive data is in your possession, you must also carefully protect it against further misuse. To this end, please send us a copy of this information, promptly delete any other copies and confirm that you have done so." like Tesla.

Do you have a moment?

Take a few minutes for our 2023 user survey and help make B2B-CYBER-SECURITY.de better!

You only have to answer 10 questions and you have an immediate chance to win prizes from Kaspersky, ESET and Bitdefender.

Here you go directly to the survey
 

In short: Even if Tesla was not able to prevent the data extraction itself and one is not even sure that it is Tesla's data, the Handelsblatt should hand over all data and delete the copies. This all sounds like a typical approach for Tesla. Time will tell if the whistleblower has more to say.

More at Handelsblatt.com

 

Matching articles on the topic

Report: 40 percent more phishing worldwide

The current spam and phishing report from Kaspersky for 2023 speaks for itself: users in Germany are after ➡ Read more

BSI sets minimum standards for web browsers

The BSI has revised the minimum standard for web browsers for administration and published version 3.0. You can remember that ➡ Read more

Stealth malware targets European companies

Hackers are attacking many companies across Europe with stealth malware. ESET researchers have reported a dramatic increase in so-called AceCryptor attacks via ➡ Read more

IT security: Basis for LockBit 4.0 defused

Trend Micro, working with the UK's National Crime Agency (NCA), analyzed the unpublished version that was in development ➡ Read more

MDR and XDR via Google Workspace

Whether in a cafe, airport terminal or home office – employees work in many places. However, this development also brings challenges ➡ Read more

Test: Security software for endpoints and individual PCs

The latest test results from the AV-TEST laboratory show very good performance of 16 established protection solutions for Windows ➡ Read more

FBI: Internet Crime Report counts $12,5 billion in damage 

The FBI's Internet Crime Complaint Center (IC3) has released its 2023 Internet Crime Report, which includes information from over 880.000 ➡ Read more

HeadCrab 2.0 discovered

The HeadCrab campaign against Redis servers, which has been active since 2021, continues to successfully infect targets with the new version. The criminals' mini-blog ➡ Read more