Brigette Honaker  |  August 11, 2020

Category: Data Breach

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Assorted bottles of liquor and beer - Drizly alcohol delivery

 

A recent Drizly alcohol delivery class action lawsuit calls the company “oblivious” and negligent in relation to a data breach that occurred earlier this year.

According to plaintiff James Barr, 2.5 million accounts with Drizly’s alcohol delivery service were affected by a data breach that began in February. However, despite the data breach happening months earlier, Barr argues that he and other Drizzly alcohol delivery customers were not told of the breach for five months.

“As a result of Drizly’s failure to maintain reasonable security measures and protocols, Plaintiff and Class members were not provided adequate notice that their sensitive customer information was compromised for at least five months and were unable to take steps to proactively mitigate the harm caused by the Data Breach,” the Drizly alcohol delivery service class action lawsuit contends.

Late last month, Drizly alcohol delivery announced the data breach in an email to customers. According to the company’s email, a hacker accessed customer information without authorization – getting ahold of customer email addresses, dates of birth, passwords, and even delivery addresses associated with accounts.

Although 2.5 million accounts were reportedly affected by the data breach, Drizly notes that no payment information was stolen and delivery addresses were only compromised for under 2% of the records.

“Hashed passwords were taken, though we use BCrypt, an industry favored hashing algorithm, to encrypt the passwords,” Drizly alcohol delivery representative said in a statement to Forbes. “Because of the encryption, Drizly accounts should not be able to be accessed, though to be cautious we’ve encouraged users to nonetheless change their passwords.”

However, verification from Tech Crunch shows that Drizly’s optimistic outlook may not be accurate.

The company reportedly found that phone numbers, IP addresses and geolocation data from user accounts were also found in some of the obtained data. Additionally, the tech news company reportedly found that dark web listings posted in mid-February included credit card information and order history.

Barr argues that the “oblivious” Drizly alcohol delivery company mishandled the data breach both before and after the incident.

Wine bottles in a row in a wine rack - Drizly alcohol delivery

Before the data breach, Barr contends that Drizly should have better protected their customers’ data from unauthorized hackers.

The Drizly alcohol delivery class action lawsuit notes that data breaches are becoming increasingly common – meaning that the company should have been aware that they had a duty to protect customer data from criminals.

Additionally, Barr challenges how Drizly handled the data breach after the fact.

According to the plaintiff, Drizly should have informed consumers immediately after learning of the breach. Because the company failed to do so, Barr and other users were allegedly denied valuable time which could have been used to mitigate the risks surrounding the data breach.

Now, customers will reportedly be faced with fraud threats that “will persist for years,” forcing users “to vigilantly monitor their financial accounts ad infinitum.” Part of this threat reportedly stems from information listings on the dark web – the underground of “black market” part of the internet where criminals may sell illegally obtained information.

The Drizly alcohol delivery class action lawsuit also claims that the company should have offered customers credit monitoring and identity theft insurance – common remedies offered to affected customers following a data breach.

“Drizly has taken no affirmative steps — beyond notifying consumers of the data breach — to protect against these broad-based types of identity theft and fraud, such as offering free credit monitoring and identity theft insurance to all customers whose sensitive customer data was stolen in the data breach,” the Drizly alcohol delivery class action lawsuit alleges.

“Drizly’s efforts are wholly insufficient to combat the indefinite and undeniable risk of identity theft and fraud.”

Barr seeks a variety of relief from the court, including an order which would require Drizly to better protect customer security and provide credit monitoring to affected consumers.

Additionally, the Drizly alcohol delivery data breach class action seeks damages from the company that would compensate Barr and others for the injuries they may have sustained due to the data breach.

Were you affected by the Drizly alcohol delivery data breach? Share your experiences in the comment section below.

Barr and the proposed Class are represented by Jason M. Leviton and Jacob A. Walker of Block & Leviton LLP; Christian Levis, Amanda Fiorilla and Anthony M. Christina of Lowey Dannenberg PC; and Gary Lynch and Jamisen A. Etzel of Carlson Lynch LLP.

The Drizly Alcohol Delivery Data Breach Class Action Lawsuit is Barr v. Drizly LLC f/k/a Drizly Inc., et al., Case No. 1:20-cv-11492, in the U.S. District Court for the District of Massachusetts.

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51 thoughts onDrizly Class Action Lawsuit Says Alcohol Delivery Service Reported Breach 5 Months Late

  1. Brian McCalla says:

    I was affected, too. Big time.

  2. Eva Wollert says:

    Please include me in this action.

  3. Carson Noel says:

    How do I join this suit? I was notified by all three credit bureaus that I had been compromised via Drizly.

  4. Kevin Benner says:

    Just notified by Lifelock that my email, Phone and home address leaked onto the dark web. Please enter me in this lawsuit.

  5. FD WATSON says:

    Charming Drizly, just charming….my date of birth, email address were leaked according to my monitoriing service that I paid for. Please add me into this class action. Despite my attempts to have Drizly pay for my monitoring service, they have been unresponsve, save for pat, social media responses.

  6. Isaiah Fatheree says:

    Please add me in. My account was leaked on the dweb and now will be at risk for the rest of my life.

  7. melissa chapman says:

    Add me please

  8. Krystal says:

    How do I join? My account was included in the breach. I can’t believe the one time I used this site my information gets stolen. I’ve never had this happen before using Drizly.

  9. Sharmi Rix says:

    Please add me. I have confirmation from Identity Guard that my information was found on the Dark Web from this breach.

  10. Felicia R Reddick says:

    add me in

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