📰TransUnion Discloses Data Breach Impacting 4.4 Million Customers
Data Breach Notification: https://t.co/UfL3KybPfZ pic.twitter.com/ugWKMre0pt
— Dark Web Informer (@DarkWebInformer) August 28, 2025
Three companies – Equifax, Experian, TransUnion – hoard your financial data.
They’ve been hacked (147 million records stolen), sued for errors, and lobbied Congress with millions in spending.
Yet they face zero competition.
That’s not capitalism. That’s a cartel. pic.twitter.com/hnwI0wQizm
— Shawn Chauhan (@shawnchauhan1) August 28, 2025
It wasn’t a rogue email. It wasn’t a phishing link. It was a third-party app buried inside TransUnion’s U.S. consumer support system that cracked open the vault. On July 28, hackers slipped in. By July 30, they were gone. What they left behind: 4.4 million exposed identities. Names, birthdates, Social Security numbers. The holy trinity of fraud. https://www.securityweek.com/transunion-data-breach-impacts-4-4-million/
TransUnion confirmed the breach in filings with Maine and Texas attorneys general. The company insists “no credit reports or core credit information” were accessed. But that’s a dodge. The stolen data is enough to open bank accounts, file tax returns, and reroute lives. The breach didn’t need credit scores. It got the keys to the kingdom. https://techcrunch.com/2025/08/28/transunion-says-hackers-stole-4-4-million-customers-personal-information/
The attack is part of a broader campaign targeting Salesforce environments. ShinyHunters, the extortion group behind recent breaches at Google, Allianz Life, Cisco, and Workday is suspected to be involved. TransUnion hasn’t confirmed the link. But the timing and method match. And the silence is telling. https://www.bleepingcomputer.com/news/security/transunion-suffers-data-breach-impacting-over-44-million-people/