Millions of loan and mortgage records exposed in another massive data breach

January 24, 2019

By Kim Komando

Another day, another massive data leak from an unsecured server. It’s alarming that these types of data breaches are becoming more common lately.In the past few weeks, we’ve seen servers expose personal information and even government data, not because of any hacking attempts, mind you, but due to poor security practices.As proven in the past quite too often, companies who fail to secure their websites and databases properly could be leaking your information in the open, too. And the worse part is this – not even the best security precautions can protect you from these data breaches!Read on and learn about the latest massive data breach caused by another unsecured server. Aside from identity fraud and scams, this one could put your mortgages, loans and home titles at risk!

Ascension data breach

Around 24 million financial and banking documents have been left exposed online yet again due to a misconfigured server.According to a report from Techcrunch, the database was sitting on an unprotected server running an Elasticsearch database. And similar to other data breaches of this type, the database was not protected by any password, allowing anyone to view and access the treasure trove of information.Fun fact: Elasticsearch is a free database search engine popular with cloud services such as Amazon Web Services.Based on Techcrunch’s findings, the breach can be traced back to Ascension, a data and analytics firm based in Fort Worth, Texas.The exposed data was discovered by security researcher Bob Diachenko on Jan. 10 via public search engines like Shodan. Thanks to Diachenko’s report, it is believed that the data was exposed for only weeks until was finally shut down on Jan. 15.Fun fact: Shodan is a free search engine tool used for tracking exposed ports, databases and vulnerable web-connected appliances. 

What was exposed?

The leaked information from the Ascension leak includes documents that are related to loan and mortgage records from a number of major banking institutions including CitiFinancial, HSBC Life Insurance, Wells Fargo, CapitalOne and even U.S. federal agencies like the Department of Housing and Urban Development.Aside from these sensitive documents, the leak also exposed personal information including:

Currently, the actual number of people affected by this data breach is still unclear and it is unknown if the information was accessed by hackers.Judging by the number of data points and the nature of the information exposed, if cybercriminals got hold of the data, they will have a field day harvesting the information to facilitate all sorts of scams like identity and financial fraud.

What to do after a data breach?

Exposed databases are nothing new and they seem to occur on a regular basis. Needless to say, if the information gets into the hands of scammers, it could lead to all kinds of malicious activity.To protect yourself from the inevitable fallout, here are some suggestions:

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https://www.komando.com/tips/cybersecurity/millions-of-loan-and-mortgage-records-exposed-in-another-massive-data-breach/