Back to Blog
high severity June 24, 2026 · scope unconfirmed

Frosty Acres Brands Listed by Booba Project Ransomware Group

Food & Beverages Stolen data: 8 GB

⚠ Were you affected?
Free email scanner — we check your address against 15.4B+ leaked records in 15 seconds.
Run free scan →
Severity High
Disclosed June 24, 2026
Affected Unconfirmed
Data exposed Internal files exfiltrated in ransomware attack

On June 24, 2026, Frosty Acres Brands appeared on the leak site of the Booba Project ransomware group after attackers exfiltrated 8 GB of the company’s internal files during a ransomware incident.

Confirmed Facts from Reporting

Public reporting indicates the food and beverage company’s data was posted to the Booba Project’s leak portal, hosted on infrastructure tracked by ransomware.live. The exposed material consists of internal files totaling 8 GB. No confirmed victim count has been released, and the precise nature of the files remains undisclosed in available reporting. The incident follows the group’s standard pattern of stealing data before encrypting systems and later publishing samples when ransom demands go unmet.

Why This Matters for You and Your Family

When a company that supplies food products to grocery stores and restaurants suffers a breach, customer records, supplier contracts, employee payroll files, or distribution lists can be exposed. If your name, address, phone number, or email appears in any of those documents, the information can be sold or published on underground forums. For families this often means increased risk of identity theft, phishing campaigns tailored to your purchasing habits, or unwanted contact from data brokers who scrape the leaked material. Even when the company says “no customer data was involved,” internal spreadsheets frequently contain personal details of employees, contractors, and business partners that ultimately affect ordinary households.

The Doxxing and Identity-Chain Risks

Credential leaks and internal documents rarely stay isolated. A single email address taken from a supplier list can be cross-referenced with gaming accounts, social-media handles, or school records belonging to you or your children. Attackers chain these pieces together to build full profiles used for doxxing, SIM-swapping, or targeted extortion. Gaming accounts are especially vulnerable because kids often reuse passwords or email addresses tied to family accounts; once one service is compromised, the trail can lead straight to home addresses and family photos. Continuous monitoring across 15.4B+ breach records and 100+ platforms combined with identity-chain mapping is one of the few practical ways to see these connections before harm occurs.

Booba Project’s Known Track Record

Public reporting attributes the Booba Project’s emergence to late 2024. The group has targeted mid-sized organizations across manufacturing, healthcare, and retail sectors. Its typical playbook involves initial access through phishing or exploited remote desktop services, followed by exfiltration of sensitive files, deployment of ransomware, and publication of stolen data on its leak site when victims refuse to pay. Past incidents show the group releases small samples first, then escalates pressure by threatening to sell the full archive or notify customers directly.

What to do

  • Run a DoxxScan to map every link between your handles, emails, phone numbers, and real identity, then use the no-subscription cleanup to remove what you can.
  • Enable continuous DoxxScan monitoring so the next breach exposing your family is caught in hours rather than months.
  • Rotate any password you used at Frosty Acres Brands or its vendors anywhere it has been reused, and switch to 2FA through an authenticator app instead of SMS.
  • Cover the household with DoxxScan family protection that extends to dependents and children’s gaming accounts that often chain back to the same address or email.
  • Let remediation specialists handle takedown requests across data brokers and leak sites on your behalf while you focus on securing accounts.

The Frosty Acres Brands incident shows how quickly corporate ransomware leaks become personal threats to ordinary families. One 8 GB upload can seed months of identity abuse if left unchecked. Starting with a DoxxScan gives you both immediate visibility into your exposure and ongoing protection through continuous monitoring across 15.4B+ breach records and 100+ platforms, AI-powered identity-chain mapping, hands-on remediation by specialists, and household coverage that includes children’s gaming accounts. Acting now limits the window attackers have to exploit this latest leak.

Share this Post on X Reddit Email
Why this isn’t just another breach checker

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.

Free checker Tells you the breach happened. End of story. You’re still on 800+ broker sites.
$129+/yr Broker-removal services scrub the address but don’t see the breach — next leak re-exposes you.
GalaxyWarden Maps the chain. Cleans both halves. $19 one-shot. Closed loop.

⚠ 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 →
Close the chain attack

Both halves of the chain, cleaned once.

A breach put your credentials in 15.4B+ leaked records. Hackers chain that data to your address on 800+ broker sites. GalaxyWarden closes both halves for $19 once — no subscription required.

Clean both halves — $19 →
Free breach scan + 800+ broker letters + 30-day proof · one payment, no subscription
W Warden Plus — ongoing monitoring $9.99/mo
Warden Plus ($9.99/mo or $99/yr): weekly re-scans, breach alerts, AI Concierge, auto re-files on relisted brokers.