Telephone and broadband provider Talktalk saw profits more than halve following a hack attack on its systems last October.
Profits fell to £14m compared with £32m a year earlier.
That fall is partly due to the costs of last year's serious cyber attack, which cost the company £42m.
Dido
Harding, TalkTalk chief executive told the BBC: "We have significantly
increased our spending on security. We take this extremely seriously."
Talktalk
lost 101,000 subscribers in its third quarter after the attack, which
resulted in the personal data of nearly 160,000 people being accessed.
The
data haul netted email addresses, names and phone numbers. 21,000
unique bank account numbers and sort codes were accessed in the attack.
There have been six arrests in the UK connected with the hacking, all of them of individuals under 21 years old.
Bounce back
Ms Harding said: "I am actually very encouraged by the way the business has bounced back so strongly in the last quarter.
"The
customer base has really stabilised and this is testimony to the fact
that our customers really appreciated our open and honest approach and
how we tried to look after them through the cyber attack."
She
added that Talktalk's customer "churn" - the turnover of customers - has
been the lowest in TalkTalk's history, suggesting customers are
satisfied with the company's service.
TalkTalk says total revenues grew 2.4% to £1.83bn in the 12 months to 31 March.
No comments:
Post a Comment