Security

Cyber-crime

I stole 20 GB of data from Capgemini – and now I'm leaking it, says cybercrook

Allegedly pilfered database has source code, private keys, staff info, T-Mobile VM logs, more


Updated A miscreant claims to have broken into Capgemini and leaked a large amount of sensitive data stolen from the technology services giant – including source code, credentials, and T-Mobile's virtual machine logs.

The French multinational IT and consulting firm did not immediately respond to The Register's request for comment, and has yet to formally confirm or deny the cyber-criminal's claims. We will update this story if and when a spokesperson replies to our inquiries. We had heard rumblings of a recent security breach at Capgemini, which earlier declined to comment on those rumors.

According to a BreachForums post today announcing the leak, a crook who goes by "grep" said they allegedly compromised Capgemini this month and swiped 20GB of data from the biz. This is said to include some databases, source code, private keys, credentials, API keys, projects, employee data, and other information.

In portions of the leaked information reviewed by The Register we could see lists of Capgemini employees with what looks like their names, email addresses, usernames, and password hashes. There were also what appeared to backup archives, and files related to Capgemini clients, including internal configuration details for their cloud infrastructure.

"They had more data but I decided to exfiltrate only big files, company confidential, Terraform, and many more," the thief wrote. As well as offering the stolen data to fellow forum users, grep also shared some select samples, including what's said to be T-Mobile VM logs. Screenshots of the allegedly stolen data posted on X appear to show customer info.

Capgemini generated more than €22 billion (about $24 billion) in revenue in 2023.

In July, the consultancy won a controversial UK government contract worth up to £574 million.

Under the lucrative deal, valued between £403 million and £574 million, Capgemini will run legacy tax management systems for His Majesty's Revenue and Customs until 2029.

Both of the services in the contract, Enterprise Tax Management Platform (ETMP) and Enterprise Operations (EOPS), run SAP ECC 6.0, a legacy system from the German software giant that exits mainstream support at the end of 2027. ®

Updated to add

For your information, spokespeople for T-Mobile US have been in touch to say its virtual machines weren't caught up in this leak.

"From what we can tell, we believe this may be a T-Mobile brand outside of the US," a representative told us.

We're happy to pass this on.

Send us news
20 Comments

Brazen crims selling stolen credit cards on Meta's Threads

The platform 'continues to take action' against illegal posts, we're told

Perfctl malware strikes again as crypto-crooks target Docker Remote API servers

Attacks on unprotected servers reach 'critical level'

Gang gobbles 15K credentials from cloud and email providers' garbage Git configs

Emeraldwhale looked sharp – until it made a common S3 bucket mistake

Uncle Sam outs a Russian accused of developing Redline infostealing malware

Or: why using the same iCloud account for malware development and gaming is a bad idea

Feds investigate China's Salt Typhoon amid campaign phone hacks

'They're taunting us,' investigator says and it looks like it's working

JPMorgan Chase sues scammers following viral 'infinite money glitch'

ATMs paid customers thousands ... and now the bank wants its money back

Ransomware's ripple effect felt across ERs as patient care suffers

389 US healthcare orgs infected this year alone

Would banning ransomware insurance stop the scourge?

White House official makes case for ending extortion reimbursements

Biz hired, and fired, a fake North Korean IT worker – then the ransom demands began

'My webcam isn't working today' is the new 'The dog ate my network'

Critical hardcoded SolarWinds credential now exploited in the wild

Another blow for IT software house and its customers

Cisco confirms 'ongoing investigation' after crims brag about selling tons of data

Networking giant says 'no evidence' of impact on its systems but will tell customers if their info has been stolen

Wanted. Top infosec pros willing to defend Britain on shabby salaries

GCHQ job ads seek top talent with bottom-end pay packets