Millions of Loan Applicant’s Data is Leaked via an Anonymous Server

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The security team at SafetyDetectives, led by Anurag Sen, revealed the specifics of a misconfigured Elasticsearch server that exposed the personal information of millions of loan applicants. The information primarily came from individuals who applied for microloans in Ukraine, Kazakhstan, and Russia. 
The server was identified randomly on December 5th, 2021, while monitoring specific IP addresses. Since the anonymous server lacked authentication mechanisms, it was left vulnerable and unprotected, resulting in the loss of over 870 million records and 147GB of data. 
SafetyDetectives couldn’t identify the server’s host. Customers’ logs from a variety of microloans providers’ websites were stored on a server, however, the majority weren’t financial services like lenders or banks, but rather third-party intermediates who operate as a link between the loan firm and the applicant. The majority of the data in the server’s logs were in Russian which led experts to conclude that the server is owned by a Russian corporation. 
Different types of personal information (PII) and sensitive user data were revealed in this leak, according to SafetyDetectives researchers, including details of users’ “internal passports” and other types of data. Internal passports are used to substitute for national IDs in Russia and Ukraine. They are only valid within the country’s borders. 
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