Skip to content
Data breachResolved

Giant Tiger data breach (2024)

In March 2024, Canadian discount store Giant Tiger suffered a data breach that exposed 2.8M customer records. Attributed to a vendor of the retailer, the breach included physical and email addresses, names and phone numbers.

Victim
Giant Tiger
records
2.8M
SectorRetail

Imported from Have I Been Pwned — pending editorial review and translation to French. The summary below is machine-extracted; consult the source for details.

In 2024-03-04, Giant Tiger was affected by a data breach. Approximately 2,842,669 accounts were exposed. In March 2024, Canadian discount store Giant Tiger suffered a data breach that exposed 2.8M customer records. Attributed to a vendor of the retailer, the breach included physical and email addresses, names and phone numbers.

Sources

  1. haveibeenpwned.comhttps://haveibeenpwned.com/PwnedWebsites#GiantTiger
  2. gianttiger.comhttps://gianttiger.com

Related incidents

Data breachUnknown

Leak at Electro Dépôt

Customer data attributed to French electronics retailer Electro Dépôt surfaced as one of at least 17 French breaches consolidated on an open database, exposing names, contact details, IP addresses and partial payment data.

Victim
Electro Dépôt
Data breachUnknown

Leak at Go Sport

In December 2024, French sporting-goods retailer Go Sport was named in dark-web claims of a customer data leak; the alleged fresh breach was debunked, with the data tracing back to a 'go-sport.com' file in an earlier compilation of past French breaches.

Victim
Go Sport
Data breachResolved

Data leak at Sport 2000

Customer database of French sporting-goods retailer Sport 2000 — covering roughly 4.3 million people — was stolen and circulated on hacking forums and the dark web, exposing names, contact details, dates of birth and purchase history.

Victim
Sport 2000
Records
4.4M
Data breachContained

Data leak at Top Achat

On 12 December 2024, French PC-hardware e-tailer Top Achat (LDLC group) disclosed a breach exposing customer names, email and postal addresses; no passwords or payment data were affected. The intrusion was linked to an earlier compromise at parent company LDLC.

Victim
Top Achat