In December 2018, New York-based video messaging service Dubsmash had 162 million email addresses, usernames, PBKDF2 password hashes, and other personal data such as dates of birth stolen, all of which was then put up for sale on the Dream Market dark web market the following December. The information was being sold as part of a collected dump also including the likes of MyFitnessPal (more on that below), MyHeritage (92 million), ShareThis, Armor Games, and dating app CoffeeMeetsBagel.
Dubsmash acknowledged the breach and sale of information had occurred and provided advice around password changing. However, it failed to state how the attackers got in or confirm how many users were affected.
15. Adobe
Date: October 2013
Impact: 153 million user records
In early October 2013, Adobe reported that hackers had stolen almost three million encrypted customer credit card records and login data for an undetermined number of user accounts. Days later, Adobe increased that estimate to include IDs and encrypted passwords for 38 million “active users.” Security blogger Brian Krebs then reported that a file posted just days earlier “appears to include more than 150 million username and hashed password pairs taken from Adobe.” Weeks of research showed that the hack had also exposed customer names, password, and debit and credit card information. An agreement in August 2015 called for Adobe to pay $1.1 million in legal fees and an undisclosed amount to users to settle claims of violating the Customer Records Act and unfair business practices. In November 2016, the amount paid to customers was reported to be $1 million.
16. National Public Data
Date: December 2023
Impact: 270 million people
A breach of background checking firm National Public Data exposed the data of hundreds of millions of people through the disclosure of an estimated 2.9 billion records. As a result of the December 2023 hack, stolen data was up for sale of on the dark web by hacking group USDoD in April 2024. Much of the stolen data was leaked and made freely available in a 4TB dump onto a cybercrime forum July 2024.
The incident, which only became public knowledge after a class action was filed in August 2024, exposed social security numbers, names, mailing addresses, emails, and phone numbers of 270 million people, mostly US citizens. Much of the data, which also includes information pertaining to Canadian and British residents, appears to be outdated or inaccurate but the impact of the exposure of so much personal information is nonetheless severe. An estimated 70 million rows of records cover US criminal records.
The mechanism of the initial breach remains unconfirmed but investigative reporter Brian Krebs reports that up until early August 2024 an NPD property, recordscheck.net, contained the usernames and password for the site’s administrator in a plain text archive.
In a statement, Jericho Pictures (which trades as National Public Data) advised people to closely monitor their financial accounts for unauthorised activity. National Public Data said it was working with law enforcement and governmental investigators adding that it is reviewing potentially affected records to understand the scope of the breach. It will “try to notify” affected parties if there are “further significant developments”.
Experts advise consumers to consider freezing credit with the three major bureaus (Equifax, Experian, and TransUnion) and using identity theft protection services as potential precautions.
17. Equifax
Date: 2017
Impact: 159 million records
Credit reference agency Equifax suffered a data breach in 2017 that affected 147 million US citizens and 15 million Britons. Names, social security numbers, birth dates, addresses as well as driver’s licenses of more than 10 million were exposed after attackers took advantage of a web security vulnerability to break into Equifax’s systems. The breach also exposed the credit card data of a smaller group of 209,000 people.
Attackers broke into Equifax’s systems between May and July 2017 by taking advantage of an unpatched Apache Struts vulnerability to hack into the credit reference agency’s dispute resolution portal. Patches for the exploited vulnerability had been available since March 2017, months before the attack. Struts is a popular framework for creating Java-based web applications.
Cybercriminals moved laterally through their ingress points before stealing credentials that allowed them to query its databases, systematically siphoning off stolen data. US authorities charged four named members of the Chinese military with masterminding the hack. Chinese authorities have denied any involvement in the attack.
Equifax faced numerous lawsuits and government investigations in the wake of the breach. The credit reference agency was left an estimated $1.7 billion out of pocket because of the breach without taking into account the effect on its stock price. Equifax spent an estimated $337 million on improving its technology and data security, legal and computer forensic fees and other direct costs alone.
18. eBay
Date: 2014
Impact: 145 million records
A breach on online marketplace eBay between late February and early March 2014 exposed sensitive personal information of an estimated 145 million user accounts. Cybercriminals gained access to eBay’s systems after compromising a small number of employee login credentials.
The hack allowed miscreants access to sensitive information including encrypted passwords, email addresses, mailing addresses, phone numbers and dates of birth. Financial information, including data on PayPal accounts, was stored on separate system and therefore not affected by the breach. In response to the incident, eBay applied a forced reset to user passwords.
More news-making data breaches: