Reading view

There are new articles available, click to refresh the page.

The “BlueLeaks 2.0” Breach: Will there be any accountability? Senators start with transparency.

A DataBreaches.net Editorial The “BlueLeaks 2.0” data breach may be the worst privacy and data security breach affecting students that DataBreaches has seen in 20 years of reporting on breaches affecting the education sector. If people thought the Power School incident was the worst ever, hold my coffee. Who will hold P3 Global Intel (“P3”)...

Source

Senators seek answers about hackers obtaining sensitive student data from ostensibly anonymous tip line

A bipartisan pair of senators want a company that operates a tip line for anonymously reporting school safety concerns to answer questions about hackers compromising sensitive student information.

Sens. Maggie Hassan, D-N.H., and Jim Banks, R-Ind., announced on Monday they’d sent a letter to the firm, Navigate360, about last month’s incident.

“We write to express significant concern about the risks to students, staff, and schools from a recent cyberattack on your company’s P3 Global Intel tip line,” they said in the April 24 letter. “We are particularly concerned by reports that the cyberattack exploited platform vulnerabilities in order to steal students’ highly sensitive personally identifiable information. We urge you to provide the public clarity regarding what data was stolen, how Navigate360 is responding, and what safeguards Navigate360 will put into place to prevent this from happening again.”

According to the company, more than 30,000 schools and 5,000 public safety agencies use Navigate360’s products. Hackers claimed to purloin 93 gigabytes of data from the firm.

“Your company markets its product as an anonymous tip line,” Hassan and Banks said. “However, the personally identifiable information recently released by the hackers suggests otherwise. This puts the safety of students at risk and undermines public trust in using such platforms to report suspicious activity. Education and school safety experts have expressed concerns that, without guaranteed anonymity, students will choose not to report safety concerns.”

At the time of the alleged breach, Navigate360 CEO JP Guilbault said the company was working to determine if there was an incident and if there was, its extent. He did not confirm that sensitive information was released. The company did not immediately respond to a request for comment on the senators’ letter Monday.

A whopping 82% of K-12 schools said they experienced a cyber incident between July 2023 and December 2024, according to a report from the Center for Internet Security. The scale of cyberattacks on schools expanded during COVID-19. Hackers seeking student information usually have a financial motive, such as holding the information for ransom.

The hackers in the Navigate360 case were apparently motivated by hacktivism.

“Remember folks, don’t do the dirty work for the pigs,” they wrote. “Investigating crime is their job, not yours. They don’t care about you, they want convictions and prisoners to fuel the for-profit prisons.”

Hassan and Banks’ specific questions for Navigate360 included inquiries about its cybersecurity practices, what data was compromised, whether the tip line is fully anonymous and what kind of help the company has provided to school districts.

The post Senators seek answers about hackers obtaining sensitive student data from ostensibly anonymous tip line appeared first on CyberScoop.

NOT for Sale! BlueLeaks 2.0 Hacktivist decides not to sell dataset with sensitive data

Just when I thought I might be done with work for the day, DataBreaches received an email from “Internet Yiff Machine” (IYM),  the hacktivist responsible for hacking P3 Global Intel in what has been called the “Blue Leaks 2.0” breach. As most readers know by now, IYM provided a dataset of 8.3 million tips that...

Source

BlueLeaks 2.0: 7,300+ Schools, Referral Systems Reported, and a Breach Navigate360 Still Hasn’t Publicly Confirmed

Overview and Background This is the first of what will likely be several updates to this site’s exclusive reporting on the “BlueLeaks 2.0” incident that exposed anonymous and sensitive tips by and about students on a platform that promised them anonymity and security.  DDoSecrets.org named the incident “Blue Leaks 2.0” because, like a previous leak...

Source

❌