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

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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.

On the evening of Thursday, March 12, 2026, large amounts of sensitive information were posted on the darknet, according to reports from Dagens Nyheter, Expressen, and SVT Nyheter. The data stems from a breach at IT consultant CGI Sweden, which manages critical digital services for Swedish authorities. The hacker group ByteToBreach claims responsibility, stating they exploited flaws in the digital infrastructure.

The leaked material includes the full source code for Sweden's e-government platform, email passwords, personnel data, configurations for an e-signature portal, and a representatives' register. The platform is used for digital identity management, including BankID logins for agencies like Skatteverket. The group has made the source code available for free download, while databases containing personal data on Swedish citizens and electronic signing documents are sold separately.

The leak was reported by the site Darkwebinformer and the cybersecurity account International Cyber Digest. Cyber Digest describes it as ”a serious exposure of the trust anchors and identity solutions that power Sweden's digital state.” ByteToBreach is also suspected in a prior breach at Viking Line, where passenger data was leaked.

Cert-SE, tasked with preventing IT security incidents under MSB, confirms: ”We are aware of the reports but cannot comment at this time.” DN has reviewed the alleged leak and published details on how the breach was carried out on a cybercriminal forum. CGI Sweden has been sought for comment.

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Cybersecurity accounts on X are sharing alerts and analyses of the ByteToBreach leak of Swedish e-government source code, passwords, PII, and configs from CGI Sweden's infrastructure. Reactions highlight supply chain risks, exposed vulnerabilities like RCE PoCs, and concerns over government vendor security practices.

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Dramatic illustration depicting the Coupang data breach, with data spilling from a cracked digital vault and investigators on scene.
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Coupang data breach spanned June to November

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A massive data breach at e-commerce giant Coupang exposed personal information of 33.7 million customers from June 24 to November 8. Officials revealed the attacker exploited the company's electronic signature key, prompting a thorough government investigation. The incident has heightened public concerns over South Korea's data protection capabilities.

France's interior ministry has confirmed a serious breach in its servers last Friday, allowing hackers to access internal applications. A judicial investigation is underway led by the Paris prosecutor's office. A claim of responsibility has appeared on a cybercriminal forum.

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Personal information of about 4.5 million members of Seoul's public bike sharing service Ttareungyi is believed to have leaked in 2024, leading to a police investigation. The breach, suspected to be the work of hackers, is thought to have occurred around the time of widespread DDoS attacks on public institutions.

The South Korean government announced on December 18 that it will form an interagency task force to handle the recent large-scale data breach at e-commerce giant Coupang. The task force will share information from police and government investigations and discuss ways to strengthen the company's accountability. Coupang confirmed last month that personal information from 33.7 million customer accounts was compromised.

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Police raided the headquarters of e-commerce giant Coupang on Tuesday to seize evidence related to a massive data breach affecting 33.7 million customers. The Seoul Metropolitan Police Agency's cyber investigation team conducted the search in southern Seoul. Officials aim to determine the leak's cause, route, and perpetrator using the secured digital evidence.

Hackers have accessed and stolen personal information from millions of Pornhub users, aiming to use the data for extortion schemes. The incident was highlighted in a WIRED security news roundup.

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The German Bundestag's computer network experienced a widespread outage on the afternoon, but it was not due to a hacker attack. The cause was an overload between the administration's two data centers. Speculation about a Russian assault linked to Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy's visit has been dismissed.

 

 

 

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