BALTIMORE (AP) — Clothing retailer Under Armour is investigating a recent data breach that purloined customers’ email addresses and other personal information, but so far there are no signs the hackers stole any passwords or financial information.
The breach is believed to have happened late last year, and affected 72 million email addresses, according to information cited by the cybersecurity website Have I Been Pwned. Some of the records taken also included personal information that included names, genders, birthdates and ZIP codes.
Related Articles
Trump sues JPMorgan for $5 billion, alleges the bank closed his accounts for political reasons
Paramount extends its deadline for its Warner Bros. tender offer, again
Average US long-term mortgage rate edges higher, but still near lowest point in more than 3 years
Inflation fears are high. A new poll shows one group is particularly worried
Prices ticked up in November as Americans keep spending a key inflation measure shows
In an Under Armour statement acknowledging its investigation into the claims of a data breach, the Baltimore-based company said: “We have no evidence to suggest this issue has affected UA.com or systems used to process payments or store customer passwords. Any implication that sensitive personal information of tens of millions of customers has been compromised is unfounded.”
Have I Been Pwned CEO Troy Hunt said that he agrees with Under Armour’s assertion, based on the information that has emerged so far.

Leave a Reply