Ticketmaster data breach class action lawsuit overview:
- Who: Shannon Spencer, Gerry Mcauley and Ryan Jossart filed a class action lawsuit against Ticketmaster LLC and Live Nation Entertainment Inc.
- Why: Spencer, Mcauley and Jossart claim Ticketmaster and Live Nation failed to properly secure and safeguard the personally identifiable information of more than 500 million individuals during a recent data breach.
- Where: The class action lawsuit was filed in California federal court.
A new class action lawsuit alleges that Ticketmaster and its parent company, Live Nation, failed to properly secure and safeguard the personally identifiable information (PII) of hundreds of millions of individuals during a recent data breach.
Plaintiffs Shannon Spencer, Gerry Mcauley and Ryan Jossart’s class action lawsuit claims the Ticketmaster data breach directly resulted from the company’s failure to implement “adequate and reasonable cyber-security procedures and protocols.”
“Defendants disregarded the rights of Plaintiffs and Class Members by, among other things, intentionally, willfully, recklessly, or negligently failing to take adequate and reasonable measures to ensure its data systems were protected against unauthorized intrusions,” the Ticketmaster class action says.
Spencer, Mcauley and Jossart want to represent a nationwide class of individuals whose PII was accessed and/or acquired by an unauthorized party due to the data breach.
Consumers at ‘heightened,’ ‘imminent,’ risk of fraud due to Ticketmaster data breach, class action claims
Spencer, Mcauley, and Jossart argue that the data breach has exposed them and other affected consumers to a “heightened and imminent” risk of fraud and identity theft.
“Plaintiffs and Class Members must now and in the future closely monitor their financial accounts to guard against identity theft,” the Ticketmaster class action says.
Spencer, Mcauley and Jossart claim Ticketmaster and Live Nation are guilty of negligence and negligence per se, unjust enrichment and breach of implied contract, and violating California’s Unfair Competition Law.
The plaintiffs demand a jury trial and request declaratory and injunctive relief and an award of actual, nominal, statutory, consequential and punitive damages for themselves and all class members.
ShinyHunters, the group purported to be behind the data breach, reportedly attempted to extort Ticketmaster and Live Nation prior to putting the stolen data up for sale for $500,000.
Were you affected by the Ticketmaster data breach? Let us know in the comments.
The plaintiffs are represented by John J. Nelson of Milberg Coleman Bryson Phillips Grossman, PLLC and William B. Federman of Federman & Sherwood.
The Ticketmaster data breach class action lawsuit is Spencer, et al. v. Ticketmaster, LLC, et al., Case No.?, in the U.S. District Court for the Central District of California.
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675 thoughts onTicketmaster class action claims massive data breach impacts 500M+
I commented add me at the very beginning of this and have yet to be contacted. Please add me. Their “insurance” company needs to be added as well.
I bought tickets last year. Lost my job and wound up in ICU and they were not only rude but refused to refund my money as I could not attend the event. Which waste entire reason I purchased the “insurance”.
And NOW my personal and financial info has been leaked due to their negligence? This is unacceptable.
ADD ME!
Hi, please add me to this settlement.
Thank you
Add me
Add me
It is possible the breach led to additional trouble from other sources that I had and wish settlement review.
Please add me.
Yes, we were involved in the data breech.
Please add me
Please add me
Add me… my info was affected