Keep up the excellent work,” tweeted one victim. Some of the affected expressed anger that it took the franchise two weeks to let them great security there & thanks for the delay in notifying us after thieves already charged our accts. The company didn’t say how many customers were affected. The “temporary security intrusion” resulted in hackers accessing names, billing ZIP codes, delivery addresses, email addresses and payment card information (account numbers, expiration dates and CVV numbers). According to the email, shared on social media by some recipients, affected customers placed orders on the company's mobile app or website for about 28 hours between the morning of October 1 and midday on October 2. The company admitted the incident on Saturday in an email sent to affected customers, nearly two weeks after it discovered and remediated the issue.
Pizza Hut has become the latest household name to suffer a payment card breach.