Vianet 2020 Data Breach

Vianet 2020 Data Breach

Telecommunications / Telecommunications

Vianet 2020 Data Breach

A nepalese internet service provider.

Confirmed · ObscureIQ Intelligence
Breach Risk Index i
15/100
Lower riskHigher risk
Lower: limited current risk based on data value and recency.
Data Sensitivity i
Standard
Exposed data is largely lower-sensitivity. Standard identity-protection precautions are advised.
94KRecords
2020Year

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
AddressPhysical address
Classification Tags
Cloud MisconfigurationTelecommunications2020

Breach Summary

In April 2020, the Nepalese internet service provider Vianet suffered a data breach. The attack on the ISP led to the exposure of 177k customer records including 94k unique email addresses. Also exposed were names, phone numbers and physical addresses.

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…

94K records analyzed

About Vianet

Vianet is a nepalese internet service provider.

Why They Hold Your Data

Vianet is a nepalese internet service provider. Services like this typically hold email addresses, names, phone numbers, physical addresses through account registration and normal operations.

Recent Developments

The Vianet dataset circulated publicly; treat as part of the standing exposure landscape.

Data Points Exposed

4 verified field types
Email Address
Full Name
Phone Number
Physical address High

Breach Impact

The exposure created downstream fraud and phishing risk for those affected and drew scrutiny of Vianet's data protection.

Exploitation & Downstream Threats

• SIM swap attacks where phone numbers are present | • Targeted phishing campaigns using exposed email addresses | • Doxxing risk from physical address exposure

Principal Risk Advisory

What this means for a principal

A telecom breach: subscriber and device data supports SIM-swap, account takeover and location inference. For a high-profile principal this is targeting-grade, not merely identity-theft-grade: the combination lets an adversary locate, impersonate, or pressure the principal with little additional work.

What You Should Do

  1. Treat the home address as exposed: review mail and package handling and physical-security routines, and brief household staff to verify unusual requests.
  2. Guard against SIM-swap and vishing: add a carrier port-out PIN and verify any 'support' calls independently.
  3. 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 and footprint neutralization: cross-reference against broker-available data and suppress still-removable elements, prioritizing address and phone, since this record re-seeds broker networks.
  3. ThreatWatch tuned to this incident's identifiers and misuse pattern (impersonation and targeting patterns, not generic credential monitoring).

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