A hacker group is selling more than 73 million user records on the dark web

A hacker group is selling more than 73 million user records on the dark web

A hacker group going by the name of ShinyHunters claims to have breached ten companies and is currently selling their respective user databases on a dark web marketplace for illegal products.

The hackers are the same group who breached last week Tokopedia, Indonesia's largest online store. Hackers initially leaked 15 million user records online, for free, but later put the company's entire database of 91 million user records on sale for $5,000.

Encouraged and emboldened by the profits from the Tokopedia sale, the same group has, over the course of the current week, listed the databases of 10 more companies.

This includes user databases allegedly stolen from organizations such as:

- Online dating app Zoosk (30 million user records)
- Printing service Chatbooks (15 million user records)
- South Korean fashion platform SocialShare (6 million user records)
- Food delivery service Home Chef (8 million user records)
- Online marketplace Minted (5 million user records)
- Online newspaper Chronicle of Higher Education (3 million user records)
- South Korean furniture magazine GGuMim (2 million user records)
- Health magazine Mindful (2 million user records)
- Indonesia online store Bhinneka (1.2 million user records)
- US newspaper StarTribune (1 million user records)

The listed databases total for 73.2 million user records, which the hacker is selling for around $18,000, with each database sold separately.

The hacker group has shared samples from some of the stolen databases, which ZDNet has verified to include legitimate user records -- for the samples where user details were provided.

The authenticity of some of the listed databases cannot be verified at the moment; however, sources in the threat intel community such as Cyble, Nightlion Security, Under the Breach, and ZeroFOX believe ShinyHunters is a legitimate threat actor.

Some believe the ShinyHunters group has ties to Gnosticplayers, a hacker group that was active last year, and who sold more than one billion user credentials on dark web marketplaces, as it operates on a nearly identical pattern.


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