Still, it’s an important reminder that being hacked isn’t a matter of if-it’s when. Under Armour also appears to have reacted swiftly once it learned of the breach and notified users and the public a few days later-a stark comparison to other companies, such as Uber, which hid its 2016 data breach by paying off the hackers. Under Armour and MyFitnessPal seem to have some good data practices in place: Payment information was kept separate from general user information, which was stored separately from user-uploaded app data. It’s worth noting that, as an RSA survey pointed out, passwords are one of the pieces of information U.S. With 150 million users affected, it’s one of the largest breaches on record. We don’t yet know how the data was breached.
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