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Hacker leaks Telefónica data allegedly stolen in a new breach. A hacker is threatening to leak 106GB of data allegedly stolen from Spanish telecommunications company Telefónica in a breach that the company did not acknowledge. The threat actor has leaked a 2.6GB archive that unpacks into five gigabytes of data with a little over 20,000 files to prove that the breach occurred. The breach allegedly occurred on May 30 and the hacker claims they had 12 hours of uninterrupted data exfiltration before defenders revoked access. The hacker claiming responsibility for the attack is known as "Rey" and is a member of the Hellcat Ransomware group - responsible for another breach at Telefónica in January through an internal Jira development and ticketing server. Rey told BleepingComputer that they exfiltrated 385,311 files totaling 106.3GB of internal communications (e.g. tickets, emails), purchase orders, internal logs, customer records, and employee data. They also said that the May 30 breach was possible because of a Jira misconfiguration after the company dealt with the previous compromise. BleepingComputer tried on multiple occasions since June 3rd to reach out to Telefónica over email. We also contacted several C-suite employees but received no acknowledgment of the May 30 breach. The only response we received came from a Telefónica O2 employee, who dismissed the alleged incident as an extortion attempt using outdated information from a previously known incident. Telefónica O2 is the Spanish company’s brand for its telecommunications businesses in the U.K. and Germany. Rey shared with BleepingComputer a sample and file tree of the data allegedly stolen from Telefónica on May 30. Some of the files included invoices to business clients in multiple countries, including Hungary, Germany, Spain, Chile, and Peru. In the files we received there were email addresses for employees in Spain, Germany, Peru, Argentina, and Chile, and invoices for business partners or customers in European countries. The most recent file we could find in all the info Rey shared was from 2021, though, which seems to confirm what the company representative told us. However, the hacker is adamant about the data coming from a new breach from May 30. To prove their point, they started leaking a part of the allegedly stolen files. “Since Telefonica has been denying a recent 106 GB breach containing data from its internal infrastructure, I am releasing 5 GB here as proof. Soon, I will publish the full file tree, and over the next few weeks, if Telefonica does not comply, the entire archive will be released. ;)” - Rey said. The data was initially distributed using the PixelDrain storage and data transfer services but it was removed after a few hours for legal reasons. The threat actor later distributed another download link from Kotizada, a service then turned to another service, Kotizada, which Google Chrome flags as a dangerous site and strongly recommends users to avoid it. Until Telefónica provides an official statement, it is unclear if this is a new breach consisting of old data. However, from BleepingComputer's findings, some of the email addresses in the leak belong to active employees. The HellCat hacking group is not new on the scene and they are typically focused on targeting Jira servers. They are responsible for multiple attacks at high-profile companies. They claimed compromises at Swiss global solutions provider Ascom, Jaguar Land Rover, Affinitiv Schneider Electric, and Orange Group. 8 Common Threats in 2025 While cloud attacks may be growing more sophisticated, attackers still succeed with surprisingly simple techniques. Drawing from Wiz's detections across thousands of organizations, this report reveals 8 key techniques used by cloud-fluent threat actors.

Daily Brief Summary

DATA BREACH // Hacker Leaks 106GB of Telefónica Data, Claims Fresh Breach

A hacker known as "Rey," linked to the Hellcat Ransomware group, has allegedly breached Spanish telecom giant Telefónica, threatening to leak 106GB of data.

Rey has already leaked a 2.6GB archive to validate their claims of the data breach which supposedly includes internal communications, customer records, and employee data.

The breach reportedly occurred on May 30, facilitated by a misconfiguration in a Jira server previously compromised.

Despite multiple inquiries by BleepingComputer, Telefónica has not acknowledged the recent breach, and one representative dismissed it as an extortion attempt with outdated data.

Files in the leaked data include emails and invoices from Telefónica's operations across several countries, with some content dated as recent as 2021.

The hacker has shifted to distributing the stolen data through various platforms, after initial takedown due to legal issues, increasing the risk of widespread data exposure.