
"DataBreaches did not mention this publicly sooner because Kido was already under great pressure due to the breach involving children's personal information and photos. But now that many people are feeling some relief that the hackers have supposedly deleted all the data and won't be calling parents any more, DataBreaches can reveal that on Monday, this site contacted Kido to alert them to a data leak that a researcher had discovered and reported to DataBreaches that morning."
"The leak did not involve information on children, but it involved more than 600 resumes/cvs of either employees or job applicants, with all of the personal information that one normally finds in a resume or cv. Many of the cvs were for the Amelio school, which is a Kido school in India. The other cvs were for kidoschools.com. On Tuesday, a spokesperson for Kido emailed DataBreaches to thank this site and to confirm that the data had been locked down."
DataBreaches delayed public disclosure because Kido faced intense pressure from a separate breach involving children's personal information and photos. A researcher who investigated Kido discovered a second leak and reported it to DataBreaches on Monday, prompting DataBreaches to notify Kido. The second leak did not involve children but contained more than 600 resumes and CVs of employees or job applicants, including many for the Amelio school in India and others for kidoschools.com. On Tuesday, a Kido spokesperson thanked DataBreaches and confirmed the data had been locked down. Whether individual notification is required depends on access-log findings and possible prior exposure via Grayhatwarfare.
Read at DataBreaches.Net
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