Security Affairs
Adobe ColdFusion flaw CVE-2026-48282 now exploited in the wild|Hidden Web Prompts Trick AI Agents Into Sending Money|Seven Bugs in FatFs Put IoT and Embedded Devices at Risk|Bad Epoll Flaw Gives Attackers Root Access on Linux and Android|Medtronic Notifies 3.8 Million After ShinyHunters Data Breach|SECURITY AFFAIRS MALWARE NEWSLETTER ROUND 104|Security Affairs newsletter Round 584 by Pierluigi Paganini – INTERNATIONAL EDITION|U.S. Government Agency Paid $1M to Data Extortion Group Kairos|FBI: TeamPCP Compromised Dev Tools to Steal Cloud Credentials|Pegasus Used Against MEP Investigating Pegasus, Citizen Lab Finds|JADEPUFFER: First End-to-End AI-Driven Ransomware Operation|The Anatomy of a Shadow AI Supply-Chain Breach: Lessons from the 2026 Vercel Incident|Adobe ColdFusion flaw CVE-2026-48282 now exploited in the wild|Hidden Web Prompts Trick AI Agents Into Sending Money|Seven Bugs in FatFs Put IoT and Embedded Devices at Risk|Bad Epoll Flaw Gives Attackers Root Access on Linux and Android|Medtronic Notifies 3.8 Million After ShinyHunters Data Breach|SECURITY AFFAIRS MALWARE NEWSLETTER ROUND 104|Security Affairs newsletter Round 584 by Pierluigi Paganini – INTERNATIONAL EDITION|U.S. Government Agency Paid $1M to Data Extortion Group Kairos|FBI: TeamPCP Compromised Dev Tools to Steal Cloud Credentials|Pegasus Used Against MEP Investigating Pegasus, Citizen Lab Finds|JADEPUFFER: First End-to-End AI-Driven Ransomware Operation|The Anatomy of a Shadow AI Supply-Chain Breach: Lessons from the 2026 Vercel Incident|
Advertisement

Ad Placeholder

Full Width × 90

Breaking News

California Pizza Kitchen discloses a data breach

American pizza chain California Pizza Kitchen (CPK) suffered a data breach that might have exposed personal information of its employees. American pizza chain California Pizza Kitchen (CPK) suffered a data breach, the company has already notified employees whose personal information might have been exposed. According to a data breach notification sent to the impacted employees, […]

California Pizza Kitchen

American pizza chain California Pizza Kitchen (CPK) suffered a data breach that might have exposed personal information of its employees.

American pizza chain California Pizza Kitchen (CPK) suffered a data breach, the company has already notified employees whose personal information might have been exposed.

According to a data breach notification sent to the impacted employees, the security breach was discovered on September 15. The company immediately launched an investigation into the incident with the support of external experts.

“On or about September 15, 2021, CPK discovered suspicious activity in its computing environment. CPK
immediately secured the environment and, with the assistance of third-party computer specialists, launched
an investigation to determine the nature and scope of the incident.” reads the data breach notification. “On or about October 4, 2021, the investigation confirmed that certain files on CPK’s systems could have been accessed without
authorization. CPK therefore undertook a review of the potentially impacted files to identify the information
involved and to whom it related.”

The investigation revealed that the data breach took place on 15 September, 2021, and the total number of current and former CPK employees affected is 103767.

The company claims to have immediately secured its infrastructure, it also declared that it has no evidence that the compromised information might have been misused.

California Pizza Kitchen also says that it took steps to improve the security of its infrastructure to prevent similar incidents in the future.

The company is offering an Experian identity theft protection service for free at the impacted employees.

“We are reviewing existing security policies and have implemented additional measures to further protect against similar incidents moving forward. We also reported the incident to law enforcement and will cooperate with any investigation. We are notifying potentially impacted individuals, including you, so that you may take steps to protect your information.” concludes the company.

Follow me on Twitter: @securityaffairs and Facebook

[adrotate banner=”9″][adrotate banner=”12″]

Pierluigi Paganini

(SecurityAffairs – hacking, data breach)

[adrotate banner=”5″]

[adrotate banner=”13″