Online multiplayer game for children.
WildWorks, the Utah studio behind the children's online game Animal Jam, suffered a data breach in October 2020 that exposed records tied to approximately 46 million accounts, including over 7 million unique email addresses. An attacker posted details of the breach on a hacking forum in November 2020. WildWorks confirmed the incident and identified the breach pathway as direct, though the specific method of intrusion has not been disclosed publicly. The exposed data included usernames, IP addresses, email addresses, and passwords stored as PBKDF2 hashes. For a subset of records, the breach also exposed dates of birth, physical home addresses, and parent names. Because Animal Jam is designed for children aged 7 to 12, and parents create accounts alongside their children, family data was embedded in the platform by design. That structure meant the breach reached beyond individual users to expose household-level information, including details that could be used to physically identify minors. WildWorks reset affected passwords and notified users directly. Where parental email addresses were on file, the company contacted parents as well. No payment card data was involved. A class-action complaint followed, citing failures under the Children's Online Privacy Protection Act (COPPA), the federal law governing data collection from minors. Affected families should treat any reused passwords as compromised and change them across other accounts. The combination of children's birthdates, home addresses, and parent contact details creates meaningful risk of targeted fraud, harassment, or other harm directed at families.
ObscureIQ assessment: High sensitivity because minors are involved. Exposure enables account takeover, grooming-adjacent abuse, harassment, fraud, and family-linked targeting.
In November 2020 an attacker posted details of the breach on a hacking forum. WildWorks confirmed it. The company reset passwords and notified users. Where parental email addresses were on file, it contacted parents directly. No payment card data was involved. But the exposed records included children's birth dates, parent email addresses, home addresses, usernames, and IP addresses. The platform's design meant family data was part of the breach. A class-action complaint followed, citing failures under COPPA. The incident is a clear example of the specific obligations that come with building a platform for children. The data of the family comes with the data of the child.
Animal Jam is an online game for children. Players adopt animal avatars and explore a nature-themed virtual world. WildWorks, a Utah studio, runs the platform. It is designed for children aged 7 to 12 and operates under COPPA, the federal law governing data collection from minors. Parents create accounts alongside their children. That design decision matters for understanding what the breach exposed.
Children’s online games collect player accounts, usernames, parental contact information, device data, gameplay activity, and payment-adjacent records tied to youth-oriented virtual worlds.
Animal Jam continues to operate under WildWorks. The company has maintained the platform through content updates and seasonal events. No major organizational or ownership changes have been widely reported since the 2020 breach.
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WildWorks, the Utah studio behind the children's online game Animal Jam, suffered a data breach in October 2020 that exposed records tied to approximately 46 million accounts, including over 7 million unique email addresses. An attacker posted details of the breach on a hacking forum in November…
Verified fields include Date of Birth, Email Address, Full Name, Gender, IP Address, Password, Physical Address, Username.
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