A fresh leak of customer details emerged, linked not to Ledger’s systems but to Global-e – an outside firm handling payments for Ledger.com. News broke when affected users received an alert email from Global-e. That message later appeared online, posted by ZachXBT, a known blockchain tracker using a fake name, via the platform X.
Unexpectedly, a breach exposed some customer records belonging to Ledger, hosted within Global-e’s online storage system. Personal details, including names and email addresses made up the compromised data, one report confirmed. What remains unclear is the number of people impacted by this event. At no point has Global-e shared specifics about when the intrusion took place.
Unexpected behavior triggered alerts at Global-e, prompting immediate steps to secure systems while probes began. Investigation followed swiftly after safeguards were applied, verifying unauthorized entry had occurred. Outside experts joined later to examine how the breach unfolded and assess potential data exposure. Findings showed certain personal details – names among them – were viewed without permission. Contact records also appeared in the set of compromised material. What emerged from analysis pointed clearly to limited but sensitive information being reached.
Following an event involving customer data, Ledger confirmed details in a statement provided to CoinDesk. The issue originated not in Ledger’s infrastructure but inside Globa
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