HUNDREDS of thousands of British Airways customers who had details stolen in a data hack could soon get paid compensation.

The cyber attack took place in 2018 and affected some 429,000 people, including both BA staff and customers.

British Airways customers are in line for compensation following a 2018 data breach

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British Airways customers are in line for compensation following a 2018 data breachCredit: PA:Press Association

Both personal and credit card data were compromised during the breach, as well as names, billing addresses and email addresses.

But affected customers eligible for pay outs may soon get cash, with lawyers for the airline now starting to settle claims outside court, according to a letter seen by The Sun.

Law firm Your Lawyers believes thousands of customers could now receive an average of £6,000 each in compensation.

This would mean BA could face paying out up to £2.4million in total to victims.

How to keep yourself safe from hackers and scammers

HERE’s how to stay safe online.

  1. Make a ‘strong’ password with 8 or more characters and a combination of upper case characters, numbers and symbols
  2. Don’t do online banking on public WiFi, unless absolutely necessary
  3. Don’t click on dodgy email links claiming to be from banks
  4. Use different passwords for different sites
  5. Never re-use your main email password
  6. Use anti-virus software
  7. Don’t accept Facebook friend requests or LinkedIn invitations from people you don’t know
  8. Think before you put personal info on social media
  9. Find My iPhone, Android Lost and BlackBerry Protect all allow you to remotely wipe a stolen phone. Set this feature up
  10. Only shop online on secure sites
  11. Don’t store your card details on websites
  12. Password protect your phone and other devices

Your Lawyers has been representing claimants for the BA case and is urging victims to sign up for legal representation before March 19, 2021.

Cases are being taken on as part of a no win, no fee agreement, so there is no cost to sign up.

If the case is successful then a percentage of the compensation – usually around 30% – will be taken to cover legal costs.

Aman Johal, director at Your Lawyers, said: “News that British Airways wants to settle compensation claims, with negotiations set to take place in the first quarter of 2021, is acknowledgement of its wrongdoing in failing to protect customer data. 

“I urge all affected by the breach to come forward and join the class action before the GLO closes.”

Another law firm SPG Law previously estimated that customers could be eligible for £2,000 or more.

The BA hack happened when users of British Airways’ website were diverted to a fraudulent site between August 2018 and September 2018.

BA was subsequently fined £20million in October 2020 by the Information Commissioner’s Office (ICO) – far less than the £183.4million it originally faced.

The airline previously claimed that travel or passport details were not accessed during the attack.

A spokesperson from BA told The Sun: “We continue to deny liability in respect of the claims brought arising out of the 2018 cyber attack and are vigorously defending the litigation.”

How do I claim compensation?

First of all, you need to have had your personal data compromised by the breach to be in line for compensation.

BA should have emailed you back in 2018 if you were a victim of the attack.

But if you never heard from the airline, and you’re worried your details could’ve been accessed, you can ask BA to investigate.

You can contact the BA customer service department on 0344 493 0787 or via its website.

If your data was accessed, you can ask Your Lawyers to represent your case on a no win, no fee basis at bagroupaction.com.

You’ll need to do this before March 19, 2021, as this is the deadline to join the Group Litigation Order (GLO).

British Airways and Virgin were recently slammed for refusing to refund flights for Tier 4 customers despite the fact they can’t travel.

It comes after BA cargo workers went on strike for nine days over Christmas following a pay and conditions dispute.

Are flights cancelled in lockdown 3? EasyJet, Ryanair, British Airways, TUI and Jet2 latest updates.

FlightRadar shows how British Airways flight from London was forced to make emergency landing after co-pilot fell unconscious at controls

This post first appeared on thesun.co.uk

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