Millennium Dental Technologies Listed by termite Ransomware Group
Founded in 1994 and Headquartered in Cerritos, California. Millennium Dental Technologies, Inc manufactures and distributes dental products. It offers PerioLase MVP-7, a laser designed especially for laser periodontal therapy that performs soft and hard tissue laser procedures.
On April 16, 2026, dental product manufacturer Millennium Dental Technologies appeared on the leak site of the termite ransomware group. The California company, which makes the PerioLase MVP-7 laser used in periodontal procedures, had internal files exfiltrated during a ransomware attack. While the exact number of people whose personal information was taken remains unknown, anyone who has been a patient, employee, vendor, or business partner of the Cerritos-based firm since its founding in 1994 could be affected.
Confirmed Facts from Reporting
Public reporting indicates that termite posted proof of the breach on its dark-web leak site, showing samples of the stolen internal files. Millennium Dental Technologies has not yet issued a public statement confirming the incident or detailing what specific records were taken. Available reporting describes the exposed material as internal files, which in similar attacks often include spreadsheets with customer details, employee records, vendor contracts, and operational documents. No evidence has surfaced that patient medical records were the primary target, but the nature of a dental technology company means names, addresses, phone numbers, email addresses, and insurance information are likely present somewhere in the stolen data.
April 16, 2026 marks the date the group listed the company. The files were exfiltrated prior to that posting, though the exact intrusion date has not been disclosed.
Why This Matters for You and Your Family
If your name, address, or contact details ever appeared in Millennium Dental Technologies’ systems, this breach puts you at immediate risk. Stolen internal files can contain spreadsheets that link patients to their dentists, employees to payroll data, or customers to purchase histories. Once that information reaches criminal marketplaces, it becomes raw material for identity theft, phishing campaigns, and long-term fraud. For families, the exposure can ripple outward: a parent’s dental-insurance file might list children’s names and dates of birth, giving attackers the starting point for opening accounts or filing false tax returns in a child’s name.
The dental industry has seen repeated attacks precisely because patient lists and supplier databases hold steady, reliable personal data that retains value for years. You cannot assume the breach only affects “corporate” records. If you or any member of your household has received treatment with a PerioLase laser, worked at the company, or supplied materials to it, your information may now be in the hands of extortionists.
The Doxxing and Identity-Chain Implications
Ransomware groups rarely stop at posting generic files. They hunt for any document that connects an email address, username, or phone number to a real person. Once one piece of data surfaces, attackers can chain it with information from other breaches to build a complete profile. A leaked work email from this incident can be matched to a personal account found elsewhere, then used to reset passwords on banking sites, social media, or children’s gaming platforms. The result is doxxing that escalates from nuisance spam to targeted harassment or full identity takeover.
Credential leaks like this one cascade into account takeovers and doxxing chains, especially when gaming usernames or family email addresses are involved. Children’s accounts are frequent secondary targets because parents often reuse passwords across home and work systems.
Termite Group’s Publicly Known Track Record
Public reporting attributes the termite ransomware group with emerging in late 2024. The gang has claimed responsibility for attacks on healthcare providers, manufacturers, and professional service firms. Notable prior victims include smaller hospitals and specialty clinics whose internal documents were published after ransom demands went unpaid. Their typical playbook begins with initial access gained through phishing or exploited remote desktop credentials, followed by rapid exfiltration of sensitive files before encryption. The group then demands payment within a short window, threatening to publish stolen data on their leak site if the deadline passes. They favor volume over sophistication, hitting mid-sized companies that may lack enterprise-grade defenses.
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 this breach connects to.
- Rotate any password you ever used at Millennium Dental Technologies or its affiliated systems, then enable two-factor authentication with an authenticator app everywhere that same password was reused.
- Enable continuous DoxxScan monitoring across 15.4B+ breach records and 100+ platforms so the next time your information appears it is caught and addressed within hours rather than months.
- Cover the household with DoxxScan family protection that extends to dependents and children’s gaming accounts, which frequently become targets when parent credentials surface in leaks like this one.
- Let remediation specialists handle the time-consuming work of sending takedown notices to data brokers and monitoring for resale of your information on underground forums.
The most important step you can take is to treat every breach as the start of a chain rather than an isolated event. Start your DoxxScan trial today and put continuous monitoring, identity-chain mapping, and hands-on remediation specialists to work for your entire family, including gaming accounts that can otherwise become gateways for further compromise. Doing so gives you a practical defense against the long tail of risks created by the termite attack on Millennium Dental Technologies.
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