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Mother of all breaches reveals 26 billion records: what we know so far

Posted on January 24, 2024 by Dissent

Vilius Petkauskas reports:

The supermassive leak contains data from numerous previous breaches, comprising an astounding 12 terabytes of information, spanning over a mind-boggling 26 billion records. The leak, which contains LinkedIn, Twitter, Weibo, Tencent, and other platforms’ user data, is almost certainly the largest ever discovered.

There are data leaks, and then there’s this. A supermassive Mother of all Breaches (MOAB for short) includes records from thousands of meticulously compiled and reindexed leaks, breaches, and privately sold databases. The full and searchable list is included at the end of this article.

Bob Dyachenko, cybersecurity researcher and owner at SecurityDiscovery.com, together with the Cybernews team, has discovered billions upon billions of exposed records on an open instance whose owner is unlikely ever to be identified.

Read more at Cybernews.

Category: Exposure

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2 thoughts on “Mother of all breaches reveals 26 billion records: what we know so far”

  1. James says:
    January 25, 2024 at 8:38 pm

    Overblown and sensationalized. This isn’t even news. It’s just someone’s stash of old data.

    1. Dissent says:
      January 26, 2024 at 8:02 am

      Generally agree with you on that, but some data reportedly has not been leaked previously.

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