Chinese Android app store and marketplace.
A dataset attributed to the Chinese Android app store HiAPK, dated to around 2014, contains about 13.9 million accounts with usernames, email addresses, and passwords stored as salted MD5 hashes. HIBP lists the breach as unverified.
ObscureIQ assessment: Exposure enables phishing, account takeover, and malware-themed scams. App-community participation may also reveal device ownership and sideloading behavior.
If accurate, salted MD5 credentials are partly recoverable, exposing reused passwords to stuffing attacks across the mobile user base.
HiAPK was a major Chinese third-party Android application store and mobile-software community.
Android app marketplaces and forums collect user accounts, emails, messages, upload history, and app-related discussion tied to mobile software discovery and sharing.
The dataset attributed to HiAPK surfaced and was indexed in 2018; provenance could not be conclusively verified.
Field names are shown in full for clarity and search visibility. Canonical machine keys are emitted only in this page’s structured data.
If you believe your information may be included:
A dataset attributed to the Chinese Android app store HiAPK, dated to around 2014, contains about 13.9 million accounts with usernames, email addresses, and passwords stored as salted MD5 hashes. HIBP lists the breach as unverified.
Verified fields include Email Address, Password, Username.
Change reused passwords, enable MFA, and (if identity or financial data is involved) freeze your credit and monitor your accounts.
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