
The cryptocurrency hardware wallet firm Ledger was hacked last June and over a million emails were exposed, according to reports from the company at the time. Months later, the hackers who obtained the Ledger data emailed clients, sent texts to customers, and created phishing links for users to enter their seeds. One customer allegedly lost $50k and during the last week, the company has been getting inundated with complaints on social media.
Last Summer’s Ledger Wallet Data Breach Leads to Phishing Scams
The Ledger hackers who obtained roughly a million customer emails and possibly other data, have been harassing customers and allegedly stealing their money. On July 29, 2020, the French bitcoin hardware wallet manufacturer explained that hackers compromised about one million customer email addresses.
Additionally, around 9,500 customers had other information exposed including names, shipping addresses, and phone numbers. Ledger detailed that it recommended customers “exercise caution” and “always be mindful of phishing attempts by malicious scammers.” The company report also wrote in bold lettering that Ledger “will never ask you for the 24 words of your recovery phrase.”
If you have a Ledger, throw it away, change your email, and move your house. A malicious third party has your detials and knows you own a hw wallet. @Ledger, what’s your plan to protect thousands of users who are now walking with a target on their back?
Phishing emails 24/7 pic.twitter.com/r9Fo0FSfPx
— Craael (@TheCraael) December 9, 2020
Meanwhile, as time passed, customers have been getting phishing emails from hackers and allegedly a few people have lost their precious cryptocurrencies. For instance, the popular bitcoiner Brad Mills told his 19,000 Twitter followers about a person who ostensibly lost $50k in crypto.
“Hey Ledger you