TOKYO, May 31 (Reuters) - Toyota Motor Corp (7203.T) said on Wednesday that information on customers in some countries in Oceania and Asia, excluding Japan, may have been left publicly accessible from October 2016 to May 2023.
The incident follows its announcement this month that the vehicle data of 2.15 million users in Japan, or almost the entire customer base who had signed up for its main cloud service platforms since 2012, had been publicly available for a decade because of human error.
The world's largest automaker by sales said the latest issue was discovered when it launched a broad investigation into cloud environments managed by Toyota Connected Corp after the earlier incident.
"As we believe that this incident also was caused by insufficient dissemination and enforcement of data handling rules ... we have implemented a system to monitor cloud configurations," Toyota said.
The issue arose because of a setting error in the cloud environment where the automaker stored customer data collected by overseas dealers for handling and managing maintenance inspections of vehicles.
It said customer information "may have been potentially accessible externally" but did not elaborate on how the information could have been accessed.
The company initially uncovered the incident announced this month by chance, during inspections that started on April 7, the spokesperson said.