Breach Intelligence

2,849

Total breached databases

This data breach involved over 1 million records and occurred in 2021. The leaked data includes a wide range of personal and professional information such as user IDs, email addresses, names, phone numbers, and social login details. The breach also included sensitive data like passwords, password questions, and answers for security hints, as well as registration and activity details. It's unclear which country the breach originated from.
  • Data: Email Addresses Passwords Names Phone Numbers Geographic Locations Usernames Security Hints Personal Information Device Identifiers Website
  • Imported:
  • Records Imported: 1,038,699
  • Number of lines: 1,038,857
  • Size: 1.68 GB
  • Passwords: Unknown

Fields count statistics

Numbers may not be precise, a precision threshold of 100 is used to determine if a field is unique.

password.plain top values

domain top values

Only the top 100 values are displayed in the chart.
Values with less than 100 occurrences are not displayed.

Frequently Asked Questions

A data breach is unauthorized access to data (often involving account takeover, malware, or misconfigured infrastructure). A data leak is exposure of data due to mistakes like public cloud storage, open databases, or accidental publishing. A database dump is a packaged dataset that may come from a breach, leak, scraping, or aggregation.

Change passwords for any affected accounts immediately, prioritizing email, banking, and any account that shares the same password. Enable multi-factor authentication wherever possible. Monitor your accounts for suspicious activity and consider placing a fraud alert or credit freeze if financial data was exposed.

Start with containment and verification: confirm what data was exposed, identify the entry point, rotate credentials (especially SSO, VPN, email), and enforce MFA. Then investigate affected systems, notify stakeholders as required, and harden controls to prevent recurrence. A structured incident response plan helps keep the work measurable and compliant.

Dark web monitoring helps you spot exposure signals early — before stolen data is widely reused for account takeover or targeted attacks. Monitoring complements vulnerability management by revealing when attackers already have leverage. Pair it with continuous attack surface monitoring and strong Asset Discovery to reduce blind spots.

Not always. Some datasets are old, incomplete, or derived from third parties. However, any exposure increases risk because credentials and personal data can be reused indefinitely. Treat it as a priority signal: rotate credentials, enforce MFA, review suspicious logins, and audit the systems that could have produced the data.

SynScan helps you connect the dots between attack surface exposure, vulnerabilities, and breach signals so you can prioritize remediation and reduce the chance of repeat incidents.