Breach of internet hate ISP exposes millions of right wing names, credit card #s, ssns, addresses, phone numbers, etc

Otis Mayfield

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Sep 17, 2021
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The breach of Epik’s internal records has cast a spotlight on a long-hidden corner of the Internet’s underworld, and researchers expect it could take months before they can process the full cache — the equivalent of tens of millions of pages. Many are digging for information on who owns and administers extremist domains about which little was previously known.

Epik, based outside Seattle, said in a data-breach notice filed with Maine’s attorney general last week that 110,000 people had been affected nationwide by having their financial account and credit card numbers, passwords, and security codes exposed. An earlier data-breach letter from the company, filed to comply with Montana law, was signed by the “Epic Security Team,” misspelling the company’s name. An Epik spokesperson said it was a simple typo.

Heidi Beirich, a veteran researcher of hate and extremism, said she is used to spending weeks or months doing “the detective work” trying to decipher who is behind a single extremist domain. The Epik data set, she said, “is like somebody has just handed you all the detective work — the names, the people behind the accounts.”




Right wingers lose their anonymity.

It's like how the roaches flee when you turn the light on.

Do you think this data breach is a good thing?
 
The breach of Epik’s internal records has cast a spotlight on a long-hidden corner of the Internet’s underworld, and researchers expect it could take months before they can process the full cache — the equivalent of tens of millions of pages. Many are digging for information on who owns and administers extremist domains about which little was previously known.

Epik, based outside Seattle, said in a data-breach notice filed with Maine’s attorney general last week that 110,000 people had been affected nationwide by having their financial account and credit card numbers, passwords, and security codes exposed. An earlier data-breach letter from the company, filed to comply with Montana law, was signed by the “Epic Security Team,” misspelling the company’s name. An Epik spokesperson said it was a simple typo.

Heidi Beirich, a veteran researcher of hate and extremism, said she is used to spending weeks or months doing “the detective work” trying to decipher who is behind a single extremist domain. The Epik data set, she said, “is like somebody has just handed you all the detective work — the names, the people behind the accounts.”




Right wingers lose their anonymity.

It's like how the roaches flee when you turn the light on.

Do you think this data breach is a good thing?
Sometimes bad things can have a little good fallout.
 
The breach of Epik’s internal records has cast a spotlight on a long-hidden corner of the Internet’s underworld, and researchers expect it could take months before they can process the full cache — the equivalent of tens of millions of pages. Many are digging for information on who owns and administers extremist domains about which little was previously known.

Epik, based outside Seattle, said in a data-breach notice filed with Maine’s attorney general last week that 110,000 people had been affected nationwide by having their financial account and credit card numbers, passwords, and security codes exposed. An earlier data-breach letter from the company, filed to comply with Montana law, was signed by the “Epic Security Team,” misspelling the company’s name. An Epik spokesperson said it was a simple typo.

Heidi Beirich, a veteran researcher of hate and extremism, said she is used to spending weeks or months doing “the detective work” trying to decipher who is behind a single extremist domain. The Epik data set, she said, “is like somebody has just handed you all the detective work — the names, the people behind the accounts.”




Right wingers lose their anonymity.

It's like how the roaches flee when you turn the light on.

Do you think this data breach is a good thing?
Well, while I smile at the members of Alt-Right Nation having their identities exposed, it just goes to show that the quest to hack and extort money...has no political ideological lines. :)
 
The breach of Epik’s internal records has cast a spotlight on a long-hidden corner of the Internet’s underworld, and researchers expect it could take months before they can process the full cache — the equivalent of tens of millions of pages. Many are digging for information on who owns and administers extremist domains about which little was previously known.

Epik, based outside Seattle, said in a data-breach notice filed with Maine’s attorney general last week that 110,000 people had been affected nationwide by having their financial account and credit card numbers, passwords, and security codes exposed. An earlier data-breach letter from the company, filed to comply with Montana law, was signed by the “Epic Security Team,” misspelling the company’s name. An Epik spokesperson said it was a simple typo.

Heidi Beirich, a veteran researcher of hate and extremism, said she is used to spending weeks or months doing “the detective work” trying to decipher who is behind a single extremist domain. The Epik data set, she said, “is like somebody has just handed you all the detective work — the names, the people behind the accounts.”




Right wingers lose their anonymity.

It's like how the roaches flee when you turn the light on.

Do you think this data breach is a good thing?
..but the right wing are not the haters and racists--that's the left and blacks..blacks commit hate crimes at TWICE the rate of whites
..blacks murder whites at TEN times the rate of vice versa
...your Op is very nonsensical = internet hate!!!??? right wingers???!!
AHAHAHHAHAAHH = bullshit
 
The breach of Epik’s internal records has cast a spotlight on a long-hidden corner of the Internet’s underworld, and researchers expect it could take months before they can process the full cache — the equivalent of tens of millions of pages. Many are digging for information on who owns and administers extremist domains about which little was previously known.

Epik, based outside Seattle, said in a data-breach notice filed with Maine’s attorney general last week that 110,000 people had been affected nationwide by having their financial account and credit card numbers, passwords, and security codes exposed. An earlier data-breach letter from the company, filed to comply with Montana law, was signed by the “Epic Security Team,” misspelling the company’s name. An Epik spokesperson said it was a simple typo.

Heidi Beirich, a veteran researcher of hate and extremism, said she is used to spending weeks or months doing “the detective work” trying to decipher who is behind a single extremist domain. The Epik data set, she said, “is like somebody has just handed you all the detective work — the names, the people behind the accounts.”




Right wingers lose their anonymity.

It's like how the roaches flee when you turn the light on.

Do you think this data breach is a good thing?
Obama is the KING of hate-- he hates cops/whites/Amercia---I've linked it many times before
 
The breach of Epik’s internal records has cast a spotlight on a long-hidden corner of the Internet’s underworld, and researchers expect it could take months before they can process the full cache — the equivalent of tens of millions of pages. Many are digging for information on who owns and administers extremist domains about which little was previously known.

Epik, based outside Seattle, said in a data-breach notice filed with Maine’s attorney general last week that 110,000 people had been affected nationwide by having their financial account and credit card numbers, passwords, and security codes exposed. An earlier data-breach letter from the company, filed to comply with Montana law, was signed by the “Epic Security Team,” misspelling the company’s name. An Epik spokesperson said it was a simple typo.

Heidi Beirich, a veteran researcher of hate and extremism, said she is used to spending weeks or months doing “the detective work” trying to decipher who is behind a single extremist domain. The Epik data set, she said, “is like somebody has just handed you all the detective work — the names, the people behind the accounts.”




Right wingers lose their anonymity.

It's like how the roaches flee when you turn the light on.

Do you think this data breach is a good thing?
How long have you had roaches?
 
Rightwingers aren't to smart. They couldn't build the internet or websites. They are not capable of inventing or science & sure as hell can't stop hackers.


Prove it.
 
The breach of Epik’s internal records has cast a spotlight on a long-hidden corner of the Internet’s underworld, and researchers expect it could take months before they can process the full cache — the equivalent of tens of millions of pages. Many are digging for information on who owns and administers extremist domains about which little was previously known.

Epik, based outside Seattle, said in a data-breach notice filed with Maine’s attorney general last week that 110,000 people had been affected nationwide by having their financial account and credit card numbers, passwords, and security codes exposed. An earlier data-breach letter from the company, filed to comply with Montana law, was signed by the “Epic Security Team,” misspelling the company’s name. An Epik spokesperson said it was a simple typo.

Heidi Beirich, a veteran researcher of hate and extremism, said she is used to spending weeks or months doing “the detective work” trying to decipher who is behind a single extremist domain. The Epik data set, she said, “is like somebody has just handed you all the detective work — the names, the people behind the accounts.”




Right wingers lose their anonymity.

It's like how the roaches flee when you turn the light on.

Do you think this data breach is a good thing?
You can download the entire archive of the hack here: Epik Database - Leaked, Download! | RaidForums

I would like to warn users this leak is 20GB compressed but 195GB fully uncompressed.
 
The breach of Epik’s internal records has cast a spotlight on a long-hidden corner of the Internet’s underworld, and researchers expect it could take months before they can process the full cache — the equivalent of tens of millions of pages. Many are digging for information on who owns and administers extremist domains about which little was previously known.

Epik, based outside Seattle, said in a data-breach notice filed with Maine’s attorney general last week that 110,000 people had been affected nationwide by having their financial account and credit card numbers, passwords, and security codes exposed. An earlier data-breach letter from the company, filed to comply with Montana law, was signed by the “Epic Security Team,” misspelling the company’s name. An Epik spokesperson said it was a simple typo.

Heidi Beirich, a veteran researcher of hate and extremism, said she is used to spending weeks or months doing “the detective work” trying to decipher who is behind a single extremist domain. The Epik data set, she said, “is like somebody has just handed you all the detective work — the names, the people behind the accounts.”




Right wingers lose their anonymity.

It's like how the roaches flee when you turn the light on.

Do you think this data breach is a good thing?
There is no left-wing extremism????
 

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