BTC-E 2014 Data Breach

BTC-E 2014 Data Breach

Cryptocurrency / Cryptocurrency

BTC-E 2014 Data Breach

A cryptocurrency service in the cryptocurrency sector.

Confirmed · ObscureIQ Intelligence
Breach Risk Index i
54/100
Lower riskHigher risk
Moderate: notable exposure with meaningful misuse potential.
Data Sensitivity i
Elevated
Exposed data raises the risk of fraud, targeting, and impersonation. Proactive steps are warranted.
552KRecords
2014Year

The Breach Risk Index (BRI) is a proprietary 0–100 score rating how dangerous a breach is right now, based on how recently the data has been circulating on the dark web and how valuable it is to attackers.

Crucial data exposed
FinancialAccount Balance
Classification Tags
Cloud MisconfigurationCryptocurrency2014

Breach Summary

In October 2014, the Bitcoin exchange BTC-E was hacked and 568k accounts were exposed. The data included email and IP addresses, wallet balances and hashed passwords.

Full threat analysis, exploitation vectors, and principal guidance below.

10 additional sections · verified field analysis · defensive doctrine

Querying breach corpus…
Cross-referencing exposed field types…
Resolving threat-actor attribution…
Compiling principal risk advisory…

552K records analyzed

About BTC-E

BTC-E is a cryptocurrency service in the cryptocurrency sector.

Why They Hold Your Data

BTC-E is a cryptocurrency service in the cryptocurrency sector. Services like this typically hold account balances, activity history, email addresses, IP addresses, passwords, usernames through account registration and normal operations.

Recent Developments

The BTC-E dataset circulated publicly; treat as part of the standing exposure landscape.

Data Points Exposed

6 verified field types
Account Balance High
Activity History
Email Address
IP Address
Password High
Username

Breach Impact

The exposure of credentials alongside personal data heightened account-takeover and reuse risk for BTC-E users and drew scrutiny of its data protection.

Exploitation & Downstream Threats

• Credential stuffing against reused passwords across other platforms | • Targeted phishing campaigns using exposed email addresses

Principal Risk Advisory

What this means for a principal

A financial-institution breach: account, wealth or payment data supports direct fraud and highly credible financial-impersonation scams. For a high-profile principal the main risk is credible impersonation and enrichment of existing exposure.

What You Should Do

  1. Reset any reused passwords and enable MFA on email first, then financial accounts.
  2. Do not use unofficial 'am I affected' lookups; several are themselves harvesting operations.

How ObscureIQ Can Help

  1. Corpus confirmation: determine whether and where the principal (plus household and staff) appear in this dataset and which specific fields are exposed for them.
  2. Exposure mapping: cross-reference the exposed identifiers against broker-available data to size and prioritize the principal's wider footprint.
  3. ThreatWatch tuned to this incident's identifiers and misuse pattern (impersonation and targeting patterns, not generic credential monitoring).

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