A Spy Agency Leaked People's Data Online-Then the Data Was Stolen
Briefly

For months, the National Telecommunication Monitoring Center (NTMC), an intelligence body in Bangladesh that's involved in collecting people's cell phone and internet activity, has published people's personal information through an unsecured database linked to its systems. And this past week, anonymous hackers attacked the exposed database, wiping details from the system and claiming to have stolen the trove of information.
WIRED has verified a sample of real-world names, phone numbers, email addresses, locations, and exam results included in the data. However, the exact nature and purpose of the amassed information is unclear, with some entries appearing to be test information, incorrect, or partial records.
"I wouldn't be expecting this to happen for any intelligence service, even if it's not really something that sensitive," says Viktor Markopoulos, a security researcher for CloudDefense.AI who discovered the unsecured database. "Even if many data are test data, they still reveal the structure that they're using, or what exactly it is that they are intercepting or plan to intercept."
Read at WIRED
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