Adapt****** Listed by shinyhunters Ransomware Group
Data being leaked by today 12:00 AM New York time. | Updated: 25 June 2026 | Warning: FINAL WARNING PAY OR LEAK
On June 24, 2026, the ransomware group ShinyHunters began leaking internal files stolen from Adapt, with the data scheduled for full public release at 12:00 AM New York time unless a ransom was paid. The incident, labeled a final warning by the attackers, affects an unknown number of individuals whose personal information appears in the exfiltrated material.
Confirmed Facts from Reporting
Public reporting indicates that ShinyHunters exfiltrated internal files during a ransomware attack on Adapt. The group posted the stolen data on their leak site and set a hard deadline of midnight Eastern Time on June 24, 2026. As of the latest available updates on June 25, 2026, the material remained accessible on the ransomware.live mirror of the ShinyHunters leak page. The precise volume and specific categories of personal data have not been independently verified, though ransomware incidents of this type routinely expose names, contact details, financial records, and employee or customer information.
Internal files were the primary material taken. No confirmed count of affected individuals has been released, leaving many people uncertain whether their information is included.
Why This Matters for You and Your Family
When a company’s internal files are stolen and threatened with release, the people whose records sit inside those files lose control over their personal information. You and your family may have accounts, addresses, phone numbers, or financial details exposed without ever having directly interacted with Adapt. Once that data reaches public forums or dark-web marketplaces, it rarely disappears. Criminals combine it with other leaks to build complete profiles that enable identity theft, fraudulent loans, or targeted scams against you or your children.
The speed of the leak—announced and executed within days—leaves little time to react. Families often discover their data only after fraudulent charges appear or after receiving unexpected calls from people claiming to be from “customer support.”
The Doxxing and Identity-Chain Implications
Stolen internal files frequently contain email addresses, usernames, phone numbers, and notes that link multiple online handles to real identities. Attackers and opportunistic criminals then follow these chains across social media, gaming platforms, and data-broker sites. A single leaked email can expose your child’s gaming account, your spouse’s work profile, and household addresses in rapid succession. This cascading effect turns one breach into long-term doxxing risks that continue for months or years.
Credential leaks like this one commonly cascade into account takeovers on gaming platforms, where children’s usernames and passwords are reused. Once an attacker controls a gaming account tied to a family email, they gain additional personal details and can pressure the household for ransom or further information.
ShinyHunters’ Publicly Known Track Record
Public reporting attributes the attack to ShinyHunters, a group that emerged several years ago and has targeted numerous organizations in the education, healthcare, and technology sectors. Notable prior victims include large online services and retailers whose customer databases were posted after ransom demands went unpaid. Their typical playbook involves initial access through phishing or exploited vulnerabilities, followed by exfiltration of sensitive files, and then public shaming on leak sites with countdown timers. The group routinely escalates pressure by releasing small samples before threatening full dumps, a pattern consistent with the Adapt incident.
What to do
- Run a DoxxScan to map every link between your emails, phone numbers, usernames, and real-world identity so you can see exactly what chains exist before criminals exploit them.
- Rotate any password you used at Adapt anywhere else it appears, then enable two-factor authentication through an authenticator app rather than SMS.
- Enable continuous DoxxScan monitoring across 15.4B+ breach records and 100+ platforms so the next time your information surfaces you learn within hours instead of months.
- Cover the household with DoxxScan family protection that includes dependents and children’s gaming accounts, which often become entry points when credential leaks cascade into takeovers and doxxing chains.
- Let remediation specialists handle takedown requests across data brokers and leak sites so you do not have to negotiate or chase each instance yourself.
The Adapt leak is a reminder that data stolen in ransomware attacks can surface without warning and affect anyone whose records were stored inside the victim organization. Acting quickly on the exposure you can see—and maintaining ongoing visibility into new leaks—remains the most practical defense for ordinary families. DoxxScan by GalaxyWarden delivers that continuous monitoring across 15.4 billion breach records and more than 100 platforms, AI-powered identity-chain mapping, and hands-on remediation by specialists who also cover gaming accounts belonging to you or your children.
Related breaches
Kevin Bao Lenguyen Listed by play Ransomware Group
United States…
Forces Listed by medusalocker Ransomware Group
Organization with 28 emails extracted. Domain: ***.gc.ca…
azarestan.com Listed by apt73 Ransomware Group
azarestan.com (Azarestan Business Development Group) is a holding company based in Iran. Azaresta...…
A breach leaks your credentials. Then hackers chain those credentials to your address, family, phone, and employer using public broker sites. We’re the only tool built around that chain.
⚠ Were you in this breach?
Free email scanner. We check your address against 15.4B+ leaked records in 15 seconds — then show you the $19 cleanup that removes you from the broker sites aggregating leaked data.
Check my email — free →