Standard Bank data dumped daily after cyberattack ransom refusal

A hacker known as Rootboy has begun daily data dumps from Standard Bank's systems on the dark web since 14 April, following the bank's refusal to pay a 1 Bitcoin ransom. The attack, which started on 27 February, exfiltrated 1.2TB of data from Standard Bank and Liberty. The bank has confirmed exposure of some credit card details but no CVV numbers.

A cyberattack targeting Standard Bank and its subsidiary Liberty began on 27 February 2026, resulting in the exfiltration of 1.2TB of data from internal servers. According to the Prinz Eugen ransomware leak portal, the hackers sought a peaceful resolution but claimed Standard Bank abandoned its customers after two weeks of negotiations.

Rootboy, the threat actor, refused to wait for the 1BTC ransom payment and started releasing stolen data daily on the dark web from 14 April. The dumps have escalated: 5,000 lines of customer data initially, followed by 25,000, 50,000 yesterday—including staff data from SAP—and 100,000 today. The total package contains 154 million rows, including ID numbers, home addresses, and employment details.

Standard Bank confirmed that in limited cases, stolen information includes credit card numbers and expiry dates, but CVV numbers are unaffected. "We are communicating directly with those clients and proactively replacing their cards as a precaution," the bank stated. It added that it has reported the incident to regulatory and law enforcement authorities and is enhancing security measures.

Liberty issued a holding statement signed by CEO Yuresh Maharaj, similar to Standard Bank's, though its website lacks specific details on the breach amid other health-related articles.

Mga Kaugnay na Artikulo

Dramatic illustration of a darknet leak of Swedish government IT data by hackers, showing computer screens with source code, passwords, and personal files.
Larawang ginawa ng AI

Swedish government IT data leaked on darknet

Iniulat ng AI Larawang ginawa ng AI

A hacker group called ByteToBreach has leaked sensitive information from a government IT system on the darknet. The leak includes source code, passwords, and personal data from a platform managed by IT consultant CGI Sweden. Authorities like Cert-SE confirm they are aware of the reports but decline to comment.

A massive data breach has come to light, involving 149 million credentials left exposed online. The 98GB cache includes unique usernames and passwords from financial services, social media, and dating apps. The discovery highlights ongoing vulnerabilities in digital security.

Iniulat ng AI

Hackers have targeted Waltio, a French cryptocurrency accounting platform, demanding a ransom after stealing emails and tax reports from 50,000 customers. The company reported the incident on January 21, 2026, stating that no passwords or highly sensitive data were compromised. French authorities are now investigating the sophisticated cyberattack.

Inditex, the textile group behind Zara, disclosed on Wednesday night an unauthorized access to internal databases hosted on a third-party provider's servers. The company states no customer personal data, such as names, phones or credit cards, was compromised. Operations remain fully unaffected.

Iniulat ng AI

A group calling itself the Internet Yiff Machine has released 93 gigabytes of data purportedly stolen from P3 Global Intel, a platform used by Crime Stoppers programs and law enforcement for managing anonymous crime tips. The data, containing sensitive personal information on millions of tips, was sent to Straight Arrow News and the Distributed Denial of Secrets archive. Navigate360, which owns P3, has not confirmed the breach but hired a digital forensics firm to investigate.

The operator of Hong Kong's Ngong Ping 360 cable car attraction detected irregularities in its internal network on Thursday and alerted police and the Office of the Privacy Commissioner for Personal Data. An investigation confirmed that certain data had been stolen, with the company facing a ransom demand. The firm has apologised to guests, employees, and stakeholders for the incident.

Iniulat ng AI

South Korean authorities accidentally revealed the recovery phrase for a cryptocurrency wallet in a press release, leading to the theft of nearly $5 million in seized assets. The National Tax Service issued an apology and launched an investigation into the breach. This incident highlights ongoing challenges in securing digital currencies by law enforcement.

 

 

 

Gumagamit ng cookies ang website na ito

Gumagamit kami ng cookies para sa analytics upang mapabuti ang aming site. Basahin ang aming patakaran sa privacy para sa higit pang impormasyon.
Tanggihan