March 24, 2022 at 7:36 PM
Hello BreachForums Community,
Today I have uploaded the Thingiverse Database for you to download, thanks for reading and enjoy!
In October 2021, a database backup taken from the 3D model sharing service Thingiverse began extensively circulating within the hacking community. Dating back to October 2020, the 36GB file contained 228 thousand unique email addresses, mostly alongside comments left on 3D models. The data also included usernames, IP addresses, full names and passwords stored as either unsalted SHA-1 or bcrypt hashes. In some cases, physical addresses was also exposed. Thingiverse's owner, MakerBot, is aware of the incident but at the time of writing, is yet to issue a disclosure statement.
Compromised data: Dates of birth, Email addresses, IP addresses, Names, Passwords, Physical addresses, Usernames
Today I have uploaded the Thingiverse Database for you to download, thanks for reading and enjoy!
In October 2021, a database backup taken from the 3D model sharing service Thingiverse began extensively circulating within the hacking community. Dating back to October 2020, the 36GB file contained 228 thousand unique email addresses, mostly alongside comments left on 3D models. The data also included usernames, IP addresses, full names and passwords stored as either unsalted SHA-1 or bcrypt hashes. In some cases, physical addresses was also exposed. Thingiverse's owner, MakerBot, is aware of the incident but at the time of writing, is yet to issue a disclosure statement.
Compromised data: Dates of birth, Email addresses, IP addresses, Names, Passwords, Physical addresses, Usernames
ContentsSpoiler
The .7z File's MD5 Hash is 559EFA3E49F882B36430B0DE6DDDE31C. In total, there are 228102 records. The file is 36.14GB uncompressed and 7.04GB compressed.
xmpp: [email protected]





