I told ya so. Right from the beginning, it was pretty obvious what "MOAB" was probably going to be and sure enough, this tweet came true:
Interesting find by @MayhemDayOne, wonder if it was from a shady breach search service (we’ve seen a bunch shut down over the years)? Either way, collecting and storing this data is now trivial so not a big surprise to see someone screw up their permissions and (re)leak it all. https://t.co/DM7udeUcRk
— Troy Hunt (@troyhunt) January 22, 2024
What I didn't know at the time was the hilarity of how similar this service would be to those that had come before it... and been shut down by law enforcement agencies. I mean seriously, when you're literally copying and pasting clauses from LeakedSource, what do you think is going to happen?! I sense another "I told ya so" coming...
References
- Sponsored by: Report URI: Guarding you from rogue JavaScript! Don’t get pwned; get real-time alerts & prevent breaches #SecureYourSite
- "MOAB" was the breach that wasn't (but it's very much the shady breach site that really is)
- I expected the poll on the impact of scraping to be more emphatically against it (but I do wonder if that's simply an issue of the short poll not properly explaining the impact)
- The Europcar breach wasn't a breach at all, but that's not what's noteworthy about it (not everything is "AI" FFS you over-hyped marketing droids!)