Why Ledger Kept All That Customer Data in the First Place

In This Article:

First, the good news, in a manner of speaking: Ledger customers can now see firsthand whether their personal information was exposed in the hack discovered in July.

Someone posted the complete lists of 1 million email addresses and 272,000 names, mailing addresses and phone numbers belonging to customers of the France-based maker of hardware cryptocurrency wallets. The latter list is a lot bigger than the number previously disclosed by Ledger (9,500).

Asked about the discrepancy, a Ledger spokesperson said: “At the time of the incident, logs from a third-party application managing our database showed 9,500 individuals were impacted. Simultaneously, we were working with an external security organization to conduct a forensic review, which also confirmed 9,500 people.” In an email sent to customers later Monday, Ledger said the details in the list of 272,000 “are not available in the logs that we were able to analyse.” Customers whose information was in that list will be notified by email within 24 hours, the company said.

Related: IBM Launches Test Service Using 'Holy Grail' of Data Privacy Technology

“It is a massive understatement to say we sincerely regret this situation. We take privacy extremely seriously,” Ledger said in a tweet storm Sunday. “Avoiding situations like this are a top priority for our entire company, and we have learned valuable lessons from this situation.” Among other steps, Ledger has hired a new chief information security officer and taken down 170 phishing sites since the breach, it said.

There are at least three file-sharing sites, reminiscent of the golden age of MP3 blogs, where you can download the two lists. I will not post the links but it took just a few minutes searching Twitter to find them.

If you download the trove, please check for your own details, then delete it. If you keep the file, gawk at the names or gossip with friends about it, well, I’ll be very disappointed.

Several of the email addresses in the data leak match those that received phishing emails from scammers seeking to defraud CoinDesk readers.

Related: The Pandemic Turbocharged Online Privacy Concerns

As we reported in July, these scammers were copying legitimate CoinDesk newsletters, adding some fraudulent paragraphs and links about a crypto giveaway, and sending them to individuals who never signed up to receive CoinDesk emails to begin with.

Casa CTO Jameson Lopp suggested in November that Ledger customers may have been targeted; Sunday’s data dump supports that theory.