d**********e Listed by cloak Ransomware Group
Country: *** | Size: 359GB | Private | Views: 0
On June 16, 2026, the ransomware group known as cloak added d**********e to its leak site, listing 359GB of internal files exfiltrated from the organization in what appears to be a successful ransomware deployment.
Confirmed Facts from Reporting
Public reporting on the ransomware.live portal describes the entry as marked “Private” with zero views at the time of listing. The data consists of internal files taken during a ransomware attack on the unnamed entity, whose name is partially redacted in public trackers as d**********e. No confirmed victim count has been released, and the precise nature of the organization remains unclear from available sources. The posting follows the group’s standard pattern of exfiltrating data before or during encryption attempts.
Industry research from sources such as DoxxScan™ continuous monitoring indicates that credential material from earlier breaches frequently surfaces in ransomware leaks, creating follow-on risks even when the initial posting is limited to corporate files.
Why This Matters for You and Your Family
When a company loses control of 359GB of internal documents, the information inside can include employee records, vendor contracts, customer details, or email correspondence that reference personal data. If your name, email address, phone number, or family members’ information appears in those files, it can be scraped and sold on underground forums. Credential leaks from such incidents often cascade into account takeovers that affect personal email, banking, and social media accounts you use at home.
Children’s gaming accounts are especially vulnerable because many families reuse passwords or security questions tied to a parent’s work email. A single exposed work document can therefore place your teenager’s Roblox, Fortnite, or Discord account in the crosshairs of opportunistic attackers.
The Doxxing and Identity-Chain Risks
Ransomware operators rarely stop at dumping raw files. Once data reaches underground marketplaces, other actors combine it with earlier breaches to build detailed identity chains. A leaked work email can be matched to a personal phone number, then to a home address, then to children’s usernames. This chaining turns one corporate breach into long-term doxxing material that can be used for harassment, identity theft, or targeted scams against your household.
What to Do
- Run a DoxxScan to map every link between your handles, emails, phone numbers, and real-world identity, then use the no-subscription cleanup to remove what appears.
- Rotate the password used at the breached organization anywhere it is reused, and switch on 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 exposure is caught in hours instead of months.
- Cover the household with DoxxScan family protection that extends to dependents and children’s gaming accounts that often chain back to the same addresses and emails.
- Let remediation specialists handle takedown requests across data brokers and leak sites on your behalf while you focus on securing your own accounts.
The incident is a reminder that corporate ransomware leaks quickly become personal problems when names and contact details escape into the wild. Starting with clear visibility into where your information already sits online gives you the best chance of limiting damage before criminals connect the dots. DoxxScan by GalaxyWarden delivers that visibility through continuous monitoring across 15.4 billion breach records and more than 100 platforms, AI-powered identity-chain mapping that reveals how your details link together, and hands-on remediation by specialists who manage takedowns for you and your entire household, including children’s gaming accounts that are frequently targeted once credential leaks begin to cascade.
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