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high severity March 22, 2026 · scope unconfirmed

nPower Technologies Listed by qilin Ransomware Group

nPower Technologies was listed on the qilin ransomware leak site. The group claims to have stolen internal data.

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Severity High
Disclosed March 22, 2026
Affected Unconfirmed
Data exposed Internal files exfiltrated in ransomware attack

On March 22, 2026, nPower Technologies appeared on the leak site operated by the qilin ransomware group, which claims to have stolen and is prepared to publish the company’s internal files.

Confirmed Facts from Reporting

Public reporting indicates that nPower Technologies, a technology services provider, was listed on the qilin ransomware leak site on that date. The group states it exfiltrated internal company data during a ransomware incident. No confirmed victim count for individuals has been released, and the precise volume or sensitivity of the files remains unclear from available reporting. The listing follows the typical pattern in which ransomware operators first demand payment and then threaten to release stolen data if their demands are not met.

Why This Matters for You and Your Family

When a company that handles customer records, employee information, or partner contracts is breached, the data can end up in the hands of criminals who sell it or use it for further attacks. If you or any member of your family has done business with nPower Technologies, had an account there, or had your information processed by the company, your details may now be at risk. Internal files often contain names, addresses, email accounts, phone numbers, dates of birth, and sometimes financial or login information. Once that material leaks, it rarely stays contained.

The Doxxing and Identity-Chain Risk

A single breach rarely stops at one company. Criminals combine the newly exposed data with information from earlier leaks to build detailed profiles. One email address can link to your social-media handles, your children’s gaming usernames, your home address, and your spouse’s workplace. This identity-chain mapping lets attackers move from simple credential theft to full doxxing, account takeovers, or targeted scams against your household. Credential leaks like this one frequently cascade into gaming account compromises because the same passwords or recovery emails are reused across services.

Qilin Ransomware Group’s Track Record

Public reporting attributes the qilin ransomware group’s emergence to 2022. The group has targeted organizations across multiple sectors, encrypting systems and exfiltrating data before publishing samples on its leak site when victims refuse to pay. Its typical playbook involves initial access through phishing or exploited vulnerabilities, followed by lateral movement inside networks, data theft, and then extortion that combines ransomware demands with the threat of public leaks. The exact scale of qilin’s prior operations varies in open sources, but the group maintains an active presence on dark-web leak portals.

What to do

  • Run a DoxxScan to map every link between your emails, phone numbers, handles, and real-world identity so you can see exactly what chains exist before criminals exploit them.
  • Rotate any password you used at nPower Technologies or any related service, then enable 2FA 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 your children’s gaming accounts, which often become entry points when credential leaks cascade into takeovers.
  • Let remediation specialists handle the time-consuming work of sending takedown requests to data brokers and monitoring for reappearance of your family’s information.

The incident underscores a simple reality: your personal data is only as safe as the weakest company that holds it. Taking concrete steps now limits how far attackers can travel down the identity chain that begins with this breach. DoxxScan by GalaxyWarden delivers continuous monitoring across 15.4 billion breach records and more than 100 platforms, AI-powered identity-chain mapping, and hands-on remediation by specialists, with coverage that extends to every member of your household including children’s gaming accounts.

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