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All news in category “Incidents and Data Breaches

2703 articles · page 134 of 136

AggregateIQ GitLab Leak Reveals Political Targeting Tools

🔓 The UpGuard Cyber Team discovered a publicly accessible GitLab repository belonging to AggregateIQ that exposed code, tools, and credentials used in political data operations. The leak includes an apparent campaign platform called Ripon, state configuration files, voicemail scripts, and integrations for services like Twilio and Facebook. Exposed keys, tokens, and AWS credentials raise risks of misuse and highlight ties between AIQ and Cambridge Analytica that warrant further investigation.
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ISP Exposes Administrative Credentials via S3 Misconfig

🔓On October 11, 2018 UpGuard discovered that an Amazon S3 bucket named "pinapp2" exposed 73 GB of data belonging to Pocket iNet. The downloadable "tech" folder contained plaintext administrative passwords, AWS secret keys, network configuration files, inventory lists, and photographs of hardware and towers. Pocket iNet was notified the same day and secured the exposure on October 19, 2018. The incident highlights how misconfigured S3 ACLs and poor credential hygiene can place critical infrastructure at risk.
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Open rsync Repository Exposes 42,000+ Patients' Records

🔒 UpGuard discovered a publicly accessible rsync repository tied to Cohen Bergman Klepper Romano Mds PC that exposed records for more than 42,000 patients and over three million medical notes. The exposed data included patient and physician names, Social Security numbers, dates of birth, phone numbers, email and insurance information, along with an Outlook .pst and a virtual hard drive containing staff home addresses and family details. UpGuard notified the affected parties and Accenture, and the repository was secured after follow-up, underscoring failures in basic access controls and the need for faster remediation.
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AggregateIQ: Exposed Targeting Tools 'Monarch' and Saga

🔍 AggregateIQ's public repository exposed sophisticated ad and tracking tools linked to political campaigns. The Saga suite automates Facebook ad scraping, performance reconciliation, and asset backup, while Monarch provides pixel-based tracking (Jewel, Peasant) and a microservice stack (Peon) for event ingestion and enrichment. The codebase included credentials and configs enabling fine-grained targeting, though working user datasets were not present. The exposure raises significant privacy and electoral concerns.
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Marketing PR Platform Exposed Data of Hundreds of Thousands

🔓 UpGuard identified an Amazon S3 bucket tied to iPR Software that publicly exposed over a terabyte of files, including a 17 GB MongoDB backup. The collection contained 477,000 media contacts, approximately 35,000 hashed passwords, client marketing assets, internal PR strategy documents, and credentials for Google, Twitter, and a MongoDB host. UpGuard notified iPR in October 2019; public access was removed in late November after follow-up and media engagement.
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Exposed NGA Data Linked to Booz Allen S3 Misconfiguration

🛡️ UpGuard analyst Chris Vickery discovered a publicly exposed S3 file repository containing credentials and SSH keys tied to systems used by US geospatial intelligence contractors. The plaintext data included access tokens and administrative credentials that could enable entry to systems handling Top Secret-level data. NGA secured the bucket rapidly after notification; Booz Allen Hamilton responded later. UpGuard preserved the dataset at government request.
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AggregateIQ Repositories Expose Multiple Brexit Sites

📂 UpGuard's analysis of exposed development repositories from AggregateIQ details source code, backups, and credentials tied to multiple pro-Brexit organizations. The findings show WordPress backups, API keys, Stripe secrets, and scripts used to build and contact supporter lists, with administrative accounts linking AIQ staff to sites such as Vote Leave, Change Britain, and the DUP. Misuse of the exposed assets could have allowed large-scale data access or payment compromise.
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GoDaddy AWS Configuration Data Exposed in Public S3

🔓 The UpGuard Cyber Risk Team discovered a publicly accessible Amazon S3 bucket that contained detailed configuration spreadsheets appearing to describe GoDaddy infrastructure running in the AWS cloud. The files included over 24,000 hostnames and 41 configuration fields per system, plus modeled financials and apparent AWS discounting—information useful for targeted attacks or competitive intelligence. GoDaddy closed the exposure after notification; no credentials were found, but the incident highlights the severe consequences of cloud misconfiguration at scale.
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Misconfigured NICE Systems S3 Exposed Verizon Customer Data

🔒 A misconfigured Amazon S3 repository administered by NICE Systems exposed names, addresses, account details and PINs tied to Verizon customers; UpGuard estimated up to 14 million affected while Verizon disputed a 6 million figure. The publicly accessible bucket contained daily voice-log files and large text archives with unmasked fields such as PIN and CustCode, alongside call analytics metadata. UpGuard notified Verizon in June 2017 and remediation followed, but the incident underscores the severity of third-party cloud misconfigurations and vendor-managed data risk.
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AggregateIQ Files Part Three: Monarch and Saga Tools

🔎 The UpGuard Cyber Risk Team details a public discovery of AggregateIQ repositories that exposed sophisticated political targeting tools. The report highlights project families Monarch and Saga, describing ad-scraping scripts, pixel trackers, and ingestion services that link Facebook ad activity to web behavior. Exposed credentials and AWS assets amplify privacy and oversight concerns.
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Top Secret INSCOM Data Exposed via Public AWS S3 Repository

🔓 On September 27, 2017, UpGuard researcher Chris Vickery discovered an Amazon S3 bucket at the AWS subdomain "inscom" that was publicly accessible and contained 47 entries with three downloadable files. One download, an .ova virtual appliance named "ssdev," included a virtual hard drive with partitions and metadata labeled Top Secret and NOFORN. The exposed assets also contained private keys, hashed passwords, a ReadMe referencing the Pentagon cloud project Red Disk, and a classification-training snapshot. UpGuard notified INSCOM and the repository was promptly secured.
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Misconfigured Amazon S3 Exposed Tea Party Campaign Data

🔓 On August 28, 2018 the UpGuard Cyber Risk team discovered a publicly readable Amazon S3 bucket named tppcf containing roughly 2GB of campaign files belonging to the Tea Party Patriots Citizens Fund (TPPCF). The data included call lists with full names and phone numbers for about 527,000 individuals, along with strategy documents, call scripts, and marketing assets. UpGuard notified TPPCF on October 1; permissions were briefly set to allow global authenticated users and then removed by October 5. The incident illustrates how cloud misconfiguration can expose sensitive political microtargeting data and create significant privacy risks.
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TigerSwan S3 Exposure: Thousands of Resumes Leaked

🔓 UpGuard's Cyber Risk Team discovered an Amazon S3 bucket named "tigerswanresumes" that was publicly accessible, exposing 9,402 resumes and application documents submitted to TigerSwan. The files contained contact details, work histories, and sensitive identifiers — including passports, partial Social Security numbers, driver’s license numbers, and 295 resumes claiming Top Secret/SCI clearances. UpGuard notified TigerSwan and followed up repeatedly; the bucket remained accessible for roughly a month before it was secured. TigerSwan said the exposure resulted from a former recruiting vendor.
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Maryland JIA NAS Misconfiguration Exposes PII, Credentials

🔒 The UpGuard Cyber Risk Team discovered a publicly exposed, misconfigured NAS belonging to the Maryland Joint Insurance Association (JIA) that contained backup customer and operational files. The repository included full Social Security numbers, bank account and check images, insurance policy data, and plaintext administrative credentials including remote access and third-party ISO ClaimSearch logins. UpGuard notified JIA on discovery; the exposure was secured and is no longer active.
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Misconfigured S3 Exposed Tea Party Campaign Assets Online

🔓 UpGuard disclosed that an Amazon S3 bucket belonging to the Tea Party Patriots Citizens Fund (TPPCF) publicly exposed roughly 2GB of campaign materials and call lists. The files—largely PDFs and images from the 2016 election cycle—contained strategy documents, marketing assets, and call records listing full names, phone numbers and VoterIDs for about 527,000 individuals. Upon notification on October 1, 2018, TPPCF restricted bucket permissions within hours and removed access by October 5. The incident underscores how cloud misconfiguration can turn organizational data into a large-scale privacy breach with political implications.
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Medico Inc. S3 Misconfiguration Exposes Patient Data

🔓 Medico Inc. left an Amazon S3 bucket publicly accessible, exposing nearly 14,000 documents (approximately 1.7GB) that included medical records, insurance claims, legal files, and internal business data. The UpGuard Data Breach Research Team discovered the bucket on June 20, 2019, and Medico closed it within hours after notification. The dataset contained unredacted PII such as SSNs, bank account numbers, and payment card data, and also included plaintext credentials that could enable further compromise.
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Phishers Target Aviation Executives, Steal Customer Funds

📧 A targeted phishing campaign compromised an aviation executive’s Microsoft 365 credentials, allowing attackers to mine past invoice conversations and send convincing fake invoice requests to customers. Within hours the fraudsters registered a near‑identical domain and at least one customer paid a six‑figure phony invoice. Investigation links the registration details to a long‑running Nigerian BEC ring identified as SilverTerrier; firms are urged to combine employee training, domain monitoring and rapid use of the Financial Fraud Kill Chain to improve recovery chances.
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Google Files Lawsuit to Dismantle BadBox 2.0 Botnet

🔒 Google has filed a lawsuit in New York federal court targeting the operators of the BadBox 2.0 botnet, which compromised over 10 million uncertified devices running the Android Open Source Project. In partnership with HUMAN Security and Trend Micro, Google’s Ad Traffic Quality team identified preinstalled malware used for large-scale ad fraud and other illicit activity. Google updated Play Protect to automatically block BadBox-associated apps and is coordinating with the FBI to further disrupt the criminal operation.
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Nokia/MTS Telecom Inventory Exposure Reveals SORM Data

🔒 UpGuard discovered and secured a 1.7 TB publicly accessible storage repository that contained detailed documentation of telecommunications infrastructure across Russia, including schematics, administrative credentials, email archives and photographs. The dataset, hosted on an rsync server, appears to relate primarily to projects by Nokia and carrier MTS. Files included installation instructions and images for SORM interception hardware, raising significant operational and national-security risks. UpGuard notified Nokia and access was closed within days.
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Accenture Cloud Buckets Exposed Sensitive Credentials

🔒 UpGuard discovered four publicly accessible AWS S3 buckets belonging to Accenture, exposing API keys, certificates, decryption keys, plaintext passwords, and customer data associated with the Accenture Cloud Platform. The discovery was made in mid-September 2017 and reported to Accenture, which secured the buckets the following day. Exposed artifacts included master KMS keys, VPN credentials, logs, and private signing keys that could enable impersonation and secondary attacks against clients.
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