potentially compromised the accounts of as many as 18,000 current and former employees of media company Gannett Co. As of Tuesday there was no indication of accessAttack.Databreachto or acquisition of any sensitive personal data from employees ’ accounts , said the company . Gannett Co. ( GCI ) is the owner of USA TODAY , the publisher of this report , and 109 local news properties across the United States . The attack was discovered on March 30 and investigated by Gannett ’ s cybersecurity team . It appeared to originate in emails to human resources staff . The 18,000 current and former employees of the company will be sent notices about the incident and offer of credit monitoring via the US Postal Service . No customer account information was touchedAttack.Databreachby the phishing attackAttack.Phishing. They will be provided with an offer of credit monitoring because employee information was potentially available through some of the affected account login credentials before the accounts were locked down . Phishing attacksAttack.Phishingare a common method used by attackers to infiltrate computer networks . They typically consist of faked emails sent toAttack.Phishingan employee that enticeAttack.Phishingthem to click on a link that unleashes malicious software that can compromiseAttack.Databreachtheir computer accounts . Once in a network , attackers can then leapfrog to other accounts , working their way deeper into the system . In the Gannett attack , the infiltration was discovered when the perpetrator attempted to use a co-opted account for a fraudulent corporate wire transfer request . The attempt was identified by Gannett 's finance team as suspicious and was unsuccessful .