Tesla Data Breach Blamed on 'Insider Wrongdoing' Impacted 75000

21 Aug 2023
Tesla

(Bloomberg) -- Tesla Inc.’s May data breach impacted more than 75,000 people, included employee-related records and was a result of “insider wrongdoing,” according to a notice posted by the office of the Maine Attorney General Friday.

Most Read from Bloomberg

Borrowers With $39 Billion in Student Loans Finally See Relief

Putin Turns to Ruble and Ballot to Shore Up Shaken Authority

Rolls-Royce Debuts Droptail Roadster, Priced at Over $30 Million

China Urges More Loans, Debt Risk Reduction as Woes Compound

A total of 75,735 people were affected by the data breach, including nine residents of Maine. The people appear to be current or former employees of the Austin, Texas-based automaker.

“A foreign media outlet (named Handelsblatt) informed Tesla on May 10, 2023 that it had obtained Tesla confidential information,” according to a copy of an Aug. 18 letter by Tesla to those impacted that accompanied the data breach notification. “The investigation revealed that two former Tesla employees misappropriated the information in violation of Tesla’s IT security and data protection policies and shared it with the media outlet.”

Read more: Tesla Probed in Europe for Suspected Data Lapse: Handelsblatt

The letter goes on to state that Tesla filed lawsuits against the two former employees, without specifying in which jurisdiction. The lawsuits led to the seizure of electronic devices that were believed to have contained company information, according to the letter.

“Tesla also obtained court orders that prohibit the former employees from further use, access, or dissemination of the data, subject to criminal penalties,” the letter stated. “Tesla cooperated with law enforcement and external forensics experts and will continue to take appropriate steps as necessary.”

Steven Elentukh, Tesla’s data privacy officer, did not immediately respond to an email seeking comment Sunday.

Most Read from Bloomberg Businessweek

‘Don’t You Remember Me?’ The Crypto Hell on the Other Side of a Spam Text

GOP Presidential Hopeful Ramaswamy Sued Over Strive’s Practices

Sam’s Club’s War Against Costco Started With $1.38 Hot Dog Combo

The Legendary, Wildly Profitable QQQ Fund Makes No Money for Its Owner

Brookfield Chases Rivals for Private Equity’s New Money-Spinner

©2023 Bloomberg L.P.

Read more
Similar news