Hackers leak data stolen from German politicians and celebrities

It looks like the data dump, which appears to have targeted critics of the far right, was meant to embarrass.
 By 
Jack Morse
 on 
Hackers leak data stolen from German politicians and celebrities
Angela Merkel is not happy. Credit: picture alliance / getty

Maybe we should just stop using the internet altogether.

Germany is reeling following the widespread dissemination of hacked data belonging to celebrities and prominent political figures including chancellor Angela Merkel. The stolen personal information, which was spread via Twitter and other online services, includes photos, chat logs, cellphone numbers, home addresses, emails, family members' names, and more.

According to the New York Times, the nearly 1,000 people affected seem to have largely one thing in common: past criticism of the country's far right.

Notably, this leak doesn't look to be the result of one single, grand breach. Instead, notes Bloomberg, at first glance it seems the attacker or attackers used social engineering or possibly phishing techniques to gain access to social media accounts.

Importantly, all the data was not dumped this week. Instead, it was slowly released over the course of the past month. The release only gained widespread attention on Jan. 3, however, after the Twitter account of a popular YouTuber was hacked in an effort to promote the material.

Security researcher Luca Hammer wrote that two Twitter accounts, both now banned, distributed the stolen material. A website promoting the data dump was also taken down, but, of course, by that point the information was already out in the world.

The personal nature of the leaked info has led hackers and security researchers to speculate that the dump was "meant to embarrass."

Germany's BSI national cyber defense team, Reuters reports, met early Jan. 4 to coordinate a response. The government has yet to publicly point a finger at any specific actor, and as of now it's not clear who is behind the attack.

For those of you who have yet to have your online accounts hacked and the contents dumped, maybe take this as an opportunity to do some digital housekeeping — because you never know when an uninvited guest might show up.

Topics Cybersecurity

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Jack Morse

Professionally paranoid. Covering privacy, security, and all things cryptocurrency and blockchain from San Francisco.

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