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AT&T suffers massive breach: Hackers steal data of over 86 million customers; what the company said

AT&T suffers massive breach: Hackers steal data of over 86 million customers; what the company said

Time of India10-06-2025
AT&T has reportedly suffered a massive data breach, with hackers gaining access to the personal data of over 86 million customers. Currently, the telecom provider has nearly 100 million customers in the US, and hackers have reportedly uploaded the personal information of most of them on the dark web. According to a report from Hack Read, the leaked details include full names, dates of birth, phone numbers, email as well as physical addresses of AT&T customers. The report claims that more than 44 million Social Security Numbers were also reportedly part of the data leak. Individually, these data sets pose privacy risks; when combined, they could help in the creation of complete identity profiles for defraud or identity theft, the report adds
The stolen data is reportedly fully decrypted. It was initially posted on a Russian cybercrime forum last month, and then re-uploaded to the same forum earlier this month. Hackers reportedly gained access to the data through accounts lacking multi-factor authentication. The report also connected the latest leak to an original hack attributed to the ShinyHunters group in April 2024.
What AT&T said about the latest data breach
In a statement to Hack Read, an AT&T spokesperson said:
'It is not uncommon for cybercriminals to re-package previously disclosed data for financial gain. We just learned about claims that AT&T data is being made available for sale on dark web forums, and we are conducting a full investigation.'
by Taboola
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As per the report, the original seller of the exposed data claimed the leak is
'originally one of the databases from the
Snowflake breach
.'
However, HackRead's analysis found this breach contains about 16 million more records than the earlier one.
AT&T also acknowledged that security researchers had questioned any connection between this breach and the original 2024 incident.
'After analysis by our internal teams as well as external data consultants, we are confident this is repackaged data previously released on the dark web in March 2024. Affected customers were notified at that time. We have notified law enforcement of this latest development,'
the company further noted.
Users who want to check if their data was involved, you can use a tool from cybersecurity firm Pentester by visiting npd.pentester.com, where entering your details will show a list of breached accounts.
Security experts have also recommended customers to regularly monitor their credit reports.
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