Microsoft Downplays Revelation of Massive Data Leak

November 1, 2022

Microsoft customers have reason to be annoyed despite the company’s insistence there is nothing to see here. “Microsoft Under Fire After Leaking 2.4TB of Data from Customers Including Contracts, Emails, and More,” reveals Tech Times. Citing a report by cybersecurity firm SOCRadar, writer Joseph Henry tells us:

“According to SOCRadar post, 2.4TB of confidential data from more than 65,000 entities has been leaked because of the misconfiguration in the data bucket. The cybersecurity firm confirms that the data involved in the leak include State of Work (SoW) documents, PII (Personally Identifiable Information) data, Proof-of-Execution (PoE) data, customer emails, project details, product offers, and more. SOCRadar also notes that the above mentioned data spanned five years, particularly from 2017 to August 2022. It should be noted that Microsoft did not include the number of affected customers in its announcement. Unfortunately, instead of acknowledging SOCRadar’s finding, the Redmond giant downplayed the statement by disapproving of its post. Microsoft added that its investigation showed that no customer accounts were compromised in the process.”

Really? What a stroke of good fortune. Henry goes on to share some customer comments regarding the data leak as collected by Ars Technica. Apparently few are reassured by the company’s insistence SOCRadar is exaggerating. If nothing else, some note, this incident highlights Microsoft’s policy of retaining sensitive information in perpetuity. That is not exactly a security best practice. See the SOCRadar post for its description of the misconfiguration that caused this kerfuffle and its potential ramifications.

Which big tech giant will be the next one to get an F in security? My hunch is that it is Amazon’s turn to lose the game of cyber security musical chairs.

Cynthia Murrell, November 1, 2022

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