Frost & Sullivan Databases Available For Sale On A Hacker Forum
U.S. business consulting firm Frost & Sullivan suffered a data breach, a threat actor is offering for sale its databases on a hacker forum.
U.S. firm Frost & Sullivan suffered a data breach, data from an unsecured backup that were exposed on the Internet was sold by a threat actor on a hacker forum.
Frost & Sullivan is a business consulting firm involved in market research and analysis, growth strategy consulting, and corporate training across multiple industries.
Also read: Top 9 Proper Guidelines on How to Make Data Transfer Agreement Template
The company has 40 offices on six continents and over 1,800 employees.
Early this week, a threat actor known as ‘KelvinSecurity Team’ (aka KelvinSecTeam) attempted to sell company databases on a hacker forum, the dump includes data belonging employees and customers.
According to researchers from InfoArmor, KelvinSecTeam is a probable Russian hacking organization with a robust presence on Deep and Dark Web forums popular with hackers and cybercriminals, with probable team members in Central and South America — and they are growing.
The post published on the forum states that the databases contain approximately 6,000 customer records and 6,146 records for companies.
The employee database includes first and last names, login names, email addresses, and hashed passwords.
Exposed customer records include client name, email address, the company contact, whether they are confidential, and other data.
“In a conversation with Beenu Arora, CEO of cybersecurity intelligence firm Cyble, BleepingComputer was told that the data breach was caused by an unsecured backup folder that contained databases and company documents.” reported BleepingComputer.
“The breach occurred to a misconfigured backup directory on one of Frost and Sullivan public-facing servers. The backup directory had its employees and customers records, along with other confidential information,” said Arora.
KelvinSecurity Team told BleepingComputer that they attempted to report its findings to the company but received no response, then they decided to offer the data for sale.
KelvinSecurity claims that they have yet to sell the databases and that they will suspend the sale in case Frost & Sullivan will contact them.
Also read: Cross Border Data Privacy- A Guide for Singapore Businesses
0 Comments