Astoria Company data breach affected 30 million Americans

Astoria Company LLC is a lead generation company with a network of websites designed to collect information on a person that may be looking for discounted car loans, different medical insurance, or even payday loans.

Users volunteer personal information to any of their lead generation sites, which is then collected and sent to a number of partner sites (such as insurance or loan agencies), that pay per lead referral.

On January 26, 2021, the threat intelligence team at Night Lion Security became aware of several new breached databases being sold on the Dark0de market by popular hacking group Shiny Hunters. The data listed for sale included 400 million Facebook users, a database allegedly containing Instagram users, and a 300 million user database dump allegedly from Astoria Company. The details of the Astoria Company data sale included 40 million U.S. social security numbers (these numbers were later proven to be inflated).

Nearly one week later, these databases were published for sale on the Dark0de forum by Shiny Hunters.

Exposed records include the following fields:

  • Name
  • Email address
  • Date of Birth
  • Mobile Phone
  • Physical Address
  • IP Address

In addition to the base fields, many of the different lead types included additional information, such as social security numbers, full bank account information, and even medical history.

Night Lion Security’s CEO, Vinny Troia, reported to Astoria Company on January 29, 2021 the flaw in their database and the availability of their data on Dark Web.

The company investigated the issue and discovered that a former developer from India was responsible for intentionally saving database credentials to the site. Astoria ultimately took the entire site offline.

Read more about it here.

The fire in the OVH datacenter also impacted cybercrime groups

OVH, the largest cloud hosting provider in Europe and one of the largest hosting providers in the world, suffered on March 10, 2021 a fire in its Strasbourg, France data centers. The French plant in Strasbourg includes 4 data centers: SBG1, SBG2, SBG3, and SBG4. Fire destroyed one center, SBG2, and four rooms of a second one, SBG1. The fire started in SBG2.

The fire impacted 3.6 million websites, including niche government platforms in France, Britain, Poland and the Ivory Coast. OVH urged customers to implement their disaster recovery plans.

Cybercrime groups have also been impacted. Costin Raiu, the Director of the Global Research and Analysis Team (GReAT) at Kaspersky Lab, revealed that 36% of 140 OVH servers used by various threat actors as Command and Control servers went offline.

OVH has announced its plans to power servers up starting this week. SBG3 should have power starting March 17, and the other two data centers, SBG1 and SBG4, should have power starting March 19. Servers in these data centers will be powered up gradually over a few days.

Read more about it here.

Verkada breach exposed live feeds of 150,000 security cameras inside schools, hospitals, Tesla

According to a recent Bloomberg report, Verkada, a San Mateo, Silicon Valley security startup company that provides cloud-based security camera services, has suffered a major security breach. Hackers gained access to over 150,000 of its camera feeds, including cameras in Tesla factories and warehouses, Cloudflare offices, Equinox gyms, hospitals, jails, schools, police stations, and Verkada’s own offices.

One of the hackers who claimed credit for the breach is Tillie Kottmann, who has reportedly hacked Intel Corp. and Nissan Motor Corp.

The hackers’s method to gain access was unsophisticated: Kottmann said the hackers found a user name and password for the “Super Admin” account publicly exposed on the internet. This allowed them to peer into the cameras of all of Verkada’s customers.

In a statement, a Verkada spokesperson said they had disabled all internal admin accounts, to prevent any further unauthorized access.

Kottmann said the hackers’ reasons for hacking are “lots of curiosity, fighting for freedom of information and against intellectual property, a huge dose of anti-capitalism, a hint of anarchism — and it’s also just too much fun not to do it.”

Read more about it here.