Telecommunications company AT&T has trashed claims that
the personal data of 70 million of its customers has been stolen by the threat
actor ShinyHunters. The cyber-thief, whose previous exploits have affected
Microsoft, Dave, Tokopedia, Pixlr, Mashable, and Havenly among others, posted
news of the data theft on an underground hacking forum earlier this month. On the forum, ShinyHunters shared a small
sample of the data they claim to have swiped from AT&T. The threat actor
also offered to sell the whole database for the price of $1m. Researchers at RestorePrivacy analyzed the
sample of data shared by the threat actor.
"We examined the sample, and it appears to be authentic based on
available public records. Additionally, the user who posted it has a history of
major data breaches and exploits," wrote researchers in a blog post. They added: "While we cannot yet confirm
the data is from AT&T customers, everything we examined appears to be
valid." Researchers believe that ShinyHunters has accessed customer data
including names, phone numbers, physical addresses, email addresses, Social
Security numbers, and birth dates. The
hacker told RestorePrivacy that all the allegedly stolen data related to
AT&T customers located in the United States. While they would not reveal
how they obtained the data, ShinyHunters did say that they had accessed three
encrypted strings of data that included dates of birth and Social Security
numbers. In an update to a blog post
published August 19, the researchers said that AT&T had denied the breach.
An AT&T corporate communications officer told
RestorePrivacy: "Based on our investigation today, the information that
appeared in an internet chat room does not appear to have come from our
systems." Researchers described the company's response as
"interesting" and noted that "the claim that this was posted in
an 'internet chat room' is simply not correct. It was posted in a well-known
hacking forum by a user with a history of large (and verified)
exploits." The communication
company's comment came as no shock to ShinyHunters. The threat actor told researchers: "It
doesn’t surprise me. I think they will keep denying until I leak
everything."
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