CarderPlanet
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L0X is fate, or how else to explain that T-Mobile has experienced a data leak for the third time in less than 12 months.
Cybercriminals claim that they were able to disclose employee credentials, customer information, and other sensitive data.
The loot was placed on a shadow platform, where they indicated that the database was leaked in April 2023, which contains employee credentials, partial social insurance numbers (SSNs), email addresses, customer data, sales, T-Mobile analytics and other information.
According to the researchers, the samples of published data look quite legitimate, but there is no confirmed information yet.
It is known that the total amount of data is ± 90 GB.
In turn, vx-underground claims to have insider information about the hack, and the data was stolen shortly after the second T-Mobile hack this year, which occurred in March 2023.
This is only in the last year T-Mobile was bent three times, but the incident in August 2021, when the operator reported the leak only after the personal data of more than 100 million customers was posted on the darknet, has not yet cooled down in memory.
The combination of issues raises an obvious question about T-Mobile's ability to secure its systems and protect customer privacy, which is no doubt a serious concern.
Hold on, but the company will once again have to face serious consequences, including loss of trust from customers, fines from regulators and loss of market share.
Cybercriminals claim that they were able to disclose employee credentials, customer information, and other sensitive data.
The loot was placed on a shadow platform, where they indicated that the database was leaked in April 2023, which contains employee credentials, partial social insurance numbers (SSNs), email addresses, customer data, sales, T-Mobile analytics and other information.
According to the researchers, the samples of published data look quite legitimate, but there is no confirmed information yet.
It is known that the total amount of data is ± 90 GB.
In turn, vx-underground claims to have insider information about the hack, and the data was stolen shortly after the second T-Mobile hack this year, which occurred in March 2023.
This is only in the last year T-Mobile was bent three times, but the incident in August 2021, when the operator reported the leak only after the personal data of more than 100 million customers was posted on the darknet, has not yet cooled down in memory.
The combination of issues raises an obvious question about T-Mobile's ability to secure its systems and protect customer privacy, which is no doubt a serious concern.
Hold on, but the company will once again have to face serious consequences, including loss of trust from customers, fines from regulators and loss of market share.