According to Forbes, a database containing 16 billion login-password pairs has been leaked online – making it the largest data breach in internet history.
📌 What makes it alarming?
This isn’t a dump of old archives. These are new, previously unpublished credentials – many of which were never sold or seen on hacker forums before. We’re talking about fresh data from major platforms like:
- Apple
- Telegram
- X (Twitter)
- GitHub
- Government services and national registries from various countries
What experts say
Cybersecurity professionals believe the credentials were collected using infostealers – malicious software that extracts passwords, cookies, and tokens from browsers and apps.
The leak likely includes data gathered over the past 18 months and only surfaced in June 2025. Investigations are still ongoing, and the full scale may be even greater.
⚠️ What you should do right now
- Change your passwords – especially for your email, banks, social media, crypto wallets, and cloud storage.
- Enable 2FA (two-factor authentication) – it’s one of the simplest and most effective defenses.
- Check for leaks using tools like Have I Been Pwned.
Don’t store passwords in screenshots or notes — use a secure password manager (like 1Password, Bitwarden, or KeePass).
- Stay alert to phishing emails and fake links — these attacks often follow major breaches.
💬 Final thought
The internet doesn’t forgive carelessness. Even if you think you “weren’t storing anything important,” a stolen account can be used to send spam, scam your friends, gain access to other services, or become a stepping stone to compromise your work account.
2FA + strong passwords = the minimum level of protection in 2025.
Digital hygiene isn’t paranoia — it’s survival.
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