Skip to content
Data breachResolved

UN Internet Governance Forum data breach (2014)

In February 2014, the Internet Governance Forum (formed by the United Nations for policy dialogue on issues of internet governance) was attacked by hacker collective known as Deletesec.

Victim
UN Internet Governance Forum
records
3.2K
SectorFinance

Imported from Have I Been Pwned — pending editorial review and translation to French. The summary below is machine-extracted; consult the source for details.

In 2014-02-20, UN Internet Governance Forum was affected by a data breach. Approximately 3,200 accounts were exposed. In February 2014, the Internet Governance Forum (formed by the United Nations for policy dialogue on issues of internet governance) was attacked by hacker collective known as Deletesec.

Sources

  1. haveibeenpwned.comhttps://haveibeenpwned.com/PwnedWebsites#UNInternetGovernanceForum
  2. intgovforum.orghttps://intgovforum.org

Related incidents

Data breachResolved

JPMorgan Chase data breach

Attackers exploited a server missing two-factor authentication to breach more than 90 JPMorgan Chase servers and steal contact details for 76 million households and 7 million small businesses — one of the largest intrusions ever into a U.S. financial institution.

Victim
JPMorgan Chase
Records
83.0M
Data breachResolved

BTC-E data breach (2014)

In October 2014, the Bitcoin exchange BTC-E was hacked and 568k accounts were exposed. The data included email and IP addresses, wallet balances and hashed passwords.

Victim
BTC-E
Records
568.3K
Data breachResolved

Banorte data breach (2014)

In August 2022, millions of records from Mexican bank "Banorte" were publicly dumped on a popular hacking forum including 2.1M unique email addresses, physical addresses, names, phone numbers, RFC (tax) numbers, genders and bank balances.

Victim
Banorte
Records
2.1M
Data breachResolved

Business Acumen Magazine data breach (2014)

In April 2014, the Australian "Business Acumen Magazine" website was hacked by an attacker known as 1337MiR. The breach resulted in over 26,000 accounts being exposed including usernames, email addresses and password stored with a weak cryptographic hashing algorithm (MD5 with no salt).

Victim
Business Acumen Magazine
Records
26.6K