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Raychat App Suffered a Data Breach of 150 Million Users

Hacker leaks 150 million user records from Iranian Raychat app.

 

Around 7:20 a.m. on Monday, May 3, 2021, the database was first made public on a prominent Russian hacker website. It was unclear if these documents were stolen from the Raychat app's servers or whether they were a result of a recent data breach, which occurred on January 31st, 2021, as a consequence of a misconfigured database discovered by IT security researchers Bob Diachenko. 

Diachenko posted a series of tweets about the Raychat application on Twitter. He said that a misconfigured server leaked the entire database of the Raychat app. According to the researcher, the database contained over 267 million accounts with information such as addresses, addresses, passwords, metadata, encrypted messages, and so on. 

He also claimed that he had not received a response from the organization after Diachenko received a response from an Iranian Twitter user. He shared a screenshot of a tweet from the Raychat app confirming that no data had been compromised. 
 
The data was allegedly leaked by a threat actor on a well-known hacker website, Raid Forum. He said that they downloaded the data until the meow attack erased it. The data seems to be genuine, and millions of Iranians' personal information has been made public. The leaked data includes names, IP Addresses, email addresses, Bcrypt passwords, Telegram messenger IDs, etc.

Despite the fact that Iranian hackers have been blamed for increasingly advanced attacks against their adversaries, Iranian civilians have been one of the most overlooked victims of data breaches in recent years. For example, a database allegedly belonging to the Snapp app (Iranian Uber) leaked "astonishingly sensitive details" of millions of users on an unreliable MongoDB server in April 2019. 

52,000 Iranian ID cards with selfies were sold on the dark web in April 2020 and later leaked on the open web. The personal information and phone numbers of 42 million Iranians were sold on a hacker forum in March 2020. The database was first revealed on an Elasticsearch server by a misconfigured database. 

It's now up to the victims to be more cautious. They should be wary of email-based phishing attacks. Users should not click on links in texts or emails because they could be scams. By breaking into a user's phone, they could further intrude on their privacy.
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