Impact & Downstream Threats
This breach carries high risk due to the nature of exposed data fields and the scale of affected records.
- Credential stuffing against reused passwords across other platforms
- Targeted phishing campaigns using exposed email addresses
Breach Intelligence
Executive Summary
In March 2012, the music website Last.fm was hacked and 43 million user accounts were exposed. Whilst Last.fm knew of an incident back in 2012, the scale of the hack was not known until the data was released publicly in September 2016. The breach included 37 million unique email addresses, usernames and passwords stored as unsalted MD5 hashes.
About Last.fm
Music tracking and recommendation service.
Data Points Exposed
Dark Web Verification
Status: Confirmed
- Dataset containing approximately 43.6M records identified in breach intelligence sources.
- The data is indexed and searchable across breach notification platforms.
Recommended Actions
⚠️ Do not assume this is low sensitivity.
Non-clients may request a breach impact review.
Frequently Asked Questions
In March 2012, Last.fm experienced a data breach that exposed approximately 43.6M records containing personal information.
The exposed data includes fields such as activity history:website activity, email address, password, username.
Approximately 43.6M records were affected based on current breach intelligence.
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ObscureIQ Advisory
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- A public-facing individual
- A high-profile executive
- A customer of Last.fm
- Or concerned about credential reuse
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