City
Epaper

Luxury brand Louis Vuitton Korea reports data breach

By IANS | Updated: July 4, 2025 14:04 IST

Seoul, July 4 Louis Vuitton has become the latest luxury brand in South Korea to suffer a data ...

Open in App

Seoul, July 4 Louis Vuitton has become the latest luxury brand in South Korea to suffer a data breach, according to the company on Friday, following recent similar cases involving Dior, Tiffany and Cartier in the country.

In a notice posted on its website, Louis Vuitton Korea informed customers that a third-party entity temporarily accessed the company's systems on June 8 and leaked some customer information, reports Yonhap news agency.

The company said it learnt of the incident on Wednesday. The compromised data may include customer names, contact details and additional information provided by customers, Louis Vuitton said, but stressed that no financial data, such as passwords and credit card numbers, was affected.

The incident is the latest in a string of high-profile data leaks in the luxury sector in South Korea this year.

In May, Dior apologised after discovering a data breach incident that occurred in January. Tiffany also revealed in May that it had suffered a breach in April. Cartier notified customers last month about a separate incident involving leaked personal information.

‘Must It’, a popular luxury goods e-commerce platform in South Korea, also reported two hacking attempts, coming in May and June. The company warned that user data, including names, gender and dates of birth, may have been stolen.

Meanwhile, the South Korean government said on Friday it will fine SK Telecom Co. for belatedly reporting a data breach affecting all 25 million users and ordered it to waive customer cancellation fees, wrapping up its two-month probe into one of the worst data leak cases in the country's history.

SK Telecom belatedly reported the breach in April, in which universal subscriber identity module (USIM) data was potentially leaked during an unidentified cyberattack on its servers. The government inspected all 42,605 of the company's servers and found 28 infected with 33 types of malicious code, the Ministry of Science and ICT said.

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Open in App

Related Stories

BusinessBihar-based startup EnglishYaari raises ₹1 Cr at ₹10 Cr valuation, targets ₹50 Cr ARR by 2027, solving India's English fluency challenge

MumbaiThane Tree Fall Damages Three Parked Vehicles, No Injuries Reported

InternationalOver 2100 Afghan refugees deported from Iran and Pakistan in single day

Entertainment'Bua' Saba Pataudi calls birthday boy Taimur a beautiful blend of the 'Khans and Kapoor'

EntertainmentSamantha Ruth Prabhu is doing most of the action herself, and doing it in a saree in ‘Maa Inti Bangaram’

Business Realted Stories

BusinessRevised data series won’t have big impact on GDP growth estimates: Govt

BusinessPE and VC Investments in India reach 88 pc of 2024 levels, up 4 pc in Nov

BusinessOn its 10th year anniversary FITTR joins Hands with Shahid Kapoor to Introduce a New Wellness Philosophy: 'Health Is Freedom'

BusinessGujarat's Deputy CM Harsh Sanghavi Inaugurates KP Green Engineering's Matar Facility

BusinessManipal Marathon 2026: "Miles for a Greener Tomorrow" - India's Premier Student-Organised Race Invites Runners to "Run for a Sustainable Future"