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The Breachies 2025: The worst, weirdest, most impactful data breaches of the year

(Image by Gerd Altmann from Pixabay)

By THORIN KLOSOWSKI, BILL BUDINGTON, RINDALA ALAJAJI, CHRISTIAN ROMERO, LENA COHEN, HAYLEY TSUKAYAMA, AND COOPER QUINTIN

Another year has come and gone, and with it, thousands of data breaches that affect millions of people. The question these days is less, Is my information in a data breach this year? and more How many data breaches had my information in them this year? 

Some data breaches are more noteworthy than others. Where one might affect a small number of people and include little useful information, like a name or email address, others might include data ranging from a potential medical diagnosis to specific location information. To catalog and talk about these breaches we created the Breachies, a series of tongue-in-cheek awards, to highlight the most egregious data breaches. 

In most cases, if these companies practiced a privacy first approach and focused on data minimization, only collecting and storing what they absolutely need to provide the services they promise, many data breaches would be far less harmful to the victims. But instead, companies gobble up as much as they can, store it for as long as possible, and inevitably at some point someone decides to poke in and steal that data. Once all that personal data is stolen, it can be used against the breach victims for identity theftransomware attacks, and to send unwanted spam. It has become such a common occurrence that it’s easy to lose track of which breaches affect you, and just assume your information is out there somewhere. Still, a few steps can help protect your information.

Read more at Electronic Frontier Foundation

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