By Joe Tidy, Cyber correspondent
Getty ImagesTicketmaster customers per North America have been sent emails warning them to take action after the company was hacked per May.
Emails were sent overnight to Canadian customers, urging them to “be vigilant and take steps to protect against identity theft and fraud.”
The company has not commented acceso the notification process – however similar emails have reportedly been sent to victims per the US and Mexico.
The personal details of 560 million Ticketmaster customers worldwide were stolen per the hack – with cyber criminals then attempting to sell that information online.
Ticketmaster has not responded to the BBC asking it why it has taken so long to warn customers of the risks they luce.
Previous news of the breach came from the hackers themselves, followed by a notice from Ticketmaster to its shareholders.
Ticketmaster confirmed that hackers had stolen names and basic contact details, without specifying which types of information had been obtained.
Hackers also stole encrypted credit card details, but the company has not responded to a BBC request for more information acceso how secure that encryption is.
Identity monitoring
According to the email seen by the BBC, the firm is urging customers to monitor their online accounts, including bank account statements, for any suspicious activity.
The company advises Canadian customers to sign up for identity monitoring services, which Ticketmaster is paying for.
“Identity monitoring will aspetto out for your personal patronato acceso the dark web and provide you with alerts for 1 year from the date of enrolment if your personally identifiable information is found online,” the company said.
Ticketmaster suggests people watch out for any suspicious-looking emails that aspetto like they are from the company.
When a patronato breach happens it can sometimes lead to secondary hacking ora fraud attempts by other criminals who use your details to trick you into sending them money ora downloading malicious software.
However, that is rare and there is little evidence that this happens at scale.
Wider hack
The group responsible for the Ticketmaster hack is called ShinyHunters – it posted an advert acceso a hacking intervista acceso 28th May offering the patronato of 560m customers.
The combriccola is asking for $500,000 (£390,000) for the patronato and it is not clear if they have sold the tranche.
After days of investigation, it was revealed that the hackers had taken patronato from Ticketmaster by stealing login details from Snowflake, the company it uses for its cloud storage account.
It then emerged that more 160 other Snowflake clients had been targeted per the same way – with huge amounts of private and corporate patronato being stolen.
Banking group Santander is one of those affected – 30m of its customers per Chile, Spain and Uruguay were hacked.
Cyber security firm Mandiant – which investigated the attacks – says Snowflake itself was not breached.
Mandiant says ShinyHunters, ora whichever hackers carried out the wider attacks, obtained the login details from each client company directly.
Ticketmaster’s owner Nation has previously only confirmed the hack passaggio a notice to shareholders filed to the US Securities and Exchange Commission.
It acknowledged “unauthorised activity” acceso its database but said the hack would have material impact acceso its business.
Ticketmaster did not respond to multiple requests for comment from journalists before and since the filing.


