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  1. Jun 1, 2022 · A vulnerability in software developed by Turkish airline Pegasus has left 6.5 terabytes of data exposed online. The data breach, which comprises 23 million files including personal information of flight crew, is thought to have originated from a misconfigured ‘bucket’ on Amazon’s cloud service AWS.

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  2. May 31, 2022 · A data breach at Turkish firm Pegasus Airlines has put more than 6.5TB of sensitive electronic flight bag data at risk, including sensitive flight details, source code and staff data ...

  3. Jun 7, 2022 · Just a few days ago, Pegasus Airline experienced a high-magnitude AWS data breach compromising 6.5TB of data. Ultimately, 23 million files were publicly exposed, including sensitive information like flight crew PII, plain text passwords, secret keys, and even source code. The suspected culprit? The infamous S3 bucket. The breach was discovered by

  4. Jun 9, 2022 · Turkish flight operator Pegasus Airlines has suffered a data breach after an AWS cloud storage bucket was reportedly left unprotected. The Electronic Flight Bag (EFB) information belonging to an unknown number of customers was reportedly stored in the open bucket, allowing access to sensitive information.

  5. Pegasus Airlinesbreach exposed approximately 23 million files, all stored in an AWS S3 bucket. The fact that such a large dataset was improperly secured and without any password in a cloud environment prompts crucial questions: Is it safe to store personal data in the cloud? How can breaches like this be prevented?

  6. May 31, 2022 · Pegasus Airlines is a Turkey-based low-cost airline that exposed Electronic Flight Bag (EFB) data to the public including sensitive information such as source code, crew and staff data, and flight details. A team of security researchers at SafetyDetectives have shared details of an unprotected cloud data storage discovered on February 28th, 2022.

  7. An AWS S3 bucket containing Pegasus Airlines’ “Electronic Flight Bag” (EFB) information was left without password protection, leaking a range of sensitive flight data, according to the SafetyDetectives cybersecurity team.