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This Article is From Sep 17, 2018

Startup Street: The FreshMenu Hack And Why It Decided To Hide It From Customers

Startup Street: The FreshMenu Hack And Why It Decided To Hide It From Customers
A display of computer coding sits on a glass panel in the Airbus SE Defence and Space CyberSecurity pavilion. (Photographer: Krisztian Bocsi/Bloomberg)

This week on Startup Street, we have food delivery service FreshMenu receiving backlash from its customers for not revealing an important detail. Cab-hailing services Ola and Uber have inspired its latest competitor. And the state of Assam is tying up with educational institutes to build a startup culture. Here's what went on:

To Tell Or Not To Tell

If you've ordered a meal from food delivery service FreshMenu in the first two years of its launch, chances are that your data was leaked through the website.

In June 2016, the website suffered a data breach, according to website HaveIBeenPwned.com which has earlier revealed data breaches for Adobe, Forbes, Domino's and many more. The incident exposed personal data of over 1.1 lakh customers and included their names, email addresses, phone numbers, home addresses and order histories.

That, however, is not all.

“When advised of the incident, FreshMenu acknowledged being already aware of the breach but stated they had decided not to notify impacted customers,” HIBP said in a post on its website on Sept. 10.

FreshMenu soon came out with a post on its website, explaining and apologising for not revealing the breach.

“In that moment, we believe that since the breach was limited, we would focus on resolving the vulnerability and making sure that no further breaches happen. The stolen information comprised of names, email-ids and phone numbers. At no point during this time was information such as user passwords or payment related information, breached,” said founder Rashmi Daga.

I owe every user of FreshMenu a sincere apology for the breach and for not addressing this matter proactively.
Rashmi Daga, Founder, FreshMenu

After the 2016 breach, FreshMenu got in touch with AppSecure and white hat hacker Anand Prakash, to audit and strengthen its security systems, Daga said.

This jolt comes right after the four-year old startup lost a string of high level executives, as reported by TechCircle, including its chief business and technology officer Pradeep Desai, chief human resources officer Anita Menon and chief marketing officer Aparna Mahesh. Its director of new initiatives and chief product officer have also resigned from their positions.

The data breach incident has now led to fury from customers over social media.

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