There's allegedly been a significant data breach at Elon Musk's X,roman homosexual eroticism engraving formerly known as Twitter.
Over the weekend, the cybersecurity team at SafetyDetectivesdiscovered a post on the prominent hacking message board BreachForums from a poster named ThinkingOne. The post included a 34 GB .CSV file containing more than 201 million entries of data reportedly belonging to X users. This data includes plenty of metadata on each account, plus the email address connected to the account.
SafetyDetectives said they checked a sample of users included in the leak and found that the information was correct and that the emails listed were valid.
It's unclear exactly how the breach occurred. This particular leak affects more than 200 million users. However, roughly 2.8 billion X accounts are reportedly affected, potentially making this one of the largest social media data leaks of all time.
According to ThinkingOne, there was a massive data breach at Musk's X earlier this year, which saw data belonging to more than 2.8 billion X users leaked in a massive 400 GB file. In their post, ThinkingOne claims that there is “no sign that X or the general public is aware of the largest social media breach ever” and that they “tried contacting X via several methods with no response.”
This particular data breach did not disclose any sensitive information about X users. In fact, many of those accounts probably don't even belong to real users. Based on current estimates from analytics platforms like Statista, X likely has around 400 millionglobal users. Billions of those leaked X accounts likely belonged to bots, spammers, or individuals who deactivated or deleted their own accounts.
However, the leak allegedly includes plenty of metadata belonging to real accounts. And that meta data contains information such as account creation dates, locations, current and former display names, tweet count, favorites count, and other similar details.
On its own, this data may not seem like much of a threat to users. But ThinkingOne went ahead and cross-referenced this latest leak with data belonging to 209 million users from a 2023 X data breach. The older breach contained much less metadata from each account but did include the email address connected to each user, which is typically not made publicly available.
By doing this, ThinkingOne created a file on 201 million active users from the 2025 leak whose email addresses had previously been leaked.
With the email addresses and metadata combined, hackers could easily target X users with phishing emails, social engineering campaigns, and other scams.
X downplayedthe first of the leaks mentioned in 2023 but has not yet confirmed or even acknowledged the alleged 2025 leak. Musk's social media platform X was just sold to Musk's own AI company, xAI, on Friday.
Topics Cybersecurity X/Twitter Elon Musk
'Joker' malware secretly charges Android owners' credit cards'Dolemite Is My Name' review: Eddie Murphy leads crowdpleasing biopicNobody knows why this woman trolled a reporter with an M&M's hatWatch Tesla's Model S set a record lap at Laguna SecaThis kitten took his love for peanut butter to a whole new levelThat kid who said 'screw our president' is apparently Drew Carey's sonArtificial intelligence could one day diagnose skin cancer from smartphonesIn Trump's America, it's 'The Wall' vs. avocadosNow any idiot off the street can answer your dumb Alexa questionsDonald Trump wants to ban flavored vapesHey Sean Spicer, what's up with that cryptic tweet?Amazon employees are striking against climate changeThe LGBTQ community is coming to march and werk on WashingtonJenna Fischer and Angela Kinsey team up for 'The Office' podcastApple finally confirms Apple TV+ release date and priceThank you, Ms. Monopoly, you toppled the patriarchy!!!!!! (Just kidding)Here's what the new Apple Watch Series 5 looks likeSuper talented dad transforms his sons' drawings into beautiful artworkNew Google Maps tools aim to help combat opioid addictionPrint IRL Polaroids straight from your phone with this 'tabletop darkroom' Questions About Questionnaires Infiltrating Wrigley Field Stephen King Says the Clowns Are Totally Nice, Okay? Staff Picks: Tove Jansson, Marc Yankus, Kristen Stewart Newly Revealed Letters from Heidegger Confirm His Nazism Maybe What Your Office Needs Is a Bathtub “On Tour,” a Poem by Richard Howard Seeking out Spirits in One of New York’s Spookiest Bars A Partial Inventory of Gustave Flaubert’s Personal Effects by Joanna Neborsky Everybody's Protest Film: Why "Moonlight" Matters The Uncanny “I”: An Interview with Kristin Dombek Pleasures of Dance: 5 Paintings by Jesse Mockrin Our #ReadEverywhere Is Back: Hashtag Your Way to Victory Having Trouble Sleeping? Read This. Layla and Majnun: The First Opera of the Muslim World Paul Beatty Is the First American to Win the Booker Prize “The Dreams,” a Poem by Karen Fish Flaubert Was Never One for Constructive Criticism The Art of the Reissue: An Interview with Edwin Frank Read This French Novel, It Has a Mass Penguin Baptism in It
2.9309s , 10194.1953125 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【roman homosexual eroticism engraving】,Pursuit Information Network