More than 2.7 billion U.S. personal records, including Social Security numbers, were leaked on a hacking forum. Kurt “CyberGuy" Knutsson tells you what you need to know.
Tech Report is one of the oldest hardware, news, and tech review sites on the internet ... of which the personal data records of around 2.7 billion people has been leaked online.
A hacking group called USDoD claims to have stolen 2.7 billion records of personal information from Americans, including their Social Security numbers and physical addresses.
Nearly 2.7 billion personal ... data from this leak has been released, but previous posts have only included partial copies of the data. These included different numbers of records and sometimes ...
But it wasn’t until earlier this month that a user named “Fenice” leaked 2.7 billion unencrypted records on the dark web site known as “Breached,” in the form of two csv files totaling ...
Nearly 3 billion unencrypted records containing personal data of people living in the U.S., Canada and U.K. may have been leaked, according to a class action lawsuit filed in Florida. The ...
A massive data leak of some 2.7 billion records may include sensitive personal data for every person in the US, UK, and Canada. For the US, the data includes social security numbers. The data is ...
Here's what to know about the leak, which includes Social Security Numbers and may affect people in the U.S., Canada and U.K.
A massive database containing over 2.7 billion ... These records belong to individuals in the U.S. and were allegedly stolen from National Public Data (NPD). While the accuracy of the leaked ...
The "full NPD database" became public on Aug. 6 when a user named "Fenice" leaked about 2.7 billion records on the same forum, according to cybersecurity news website BleepingComputer.