Solid Advance Inc. Listed by AiLock Ransomware Group
Solid Advance Inc. is a Japanese software company, founded in 2004, based in Tokyo and Aomori. It develops and sells All Gather CRM, a fully in-house-built, integrated CRM package covering customer management, sales support (SFA), marketing, and call centers, available both in the cloud and on-premise. The company also provides network and cybersecurity services, including LAN/WAN design and security infrastructure.
On July 15, 2026, Japanese software company Solid Advance Inc. appeared on the leak site of the AiLock ransomware group. The listing states that internal files were exfiltrated during a ransomware attack on the Tokyo- and Aomori-based developer of the All Gather CRM platform. The disclosure does not specify the number of records affected or the exact nature of the stolen files beyond confirming that data was taken.
Details from the Leak-Site Listing
The primary source, hosted on the AiLock leak site and indexed by ransomware.live, confirms that Solid Advance Inc. was listed on July 15, 2026. It states that the company suffered a ransomware incident in which attackers exfiltrated internal files before encrypting systems. No sample data is publicly shown in the listing, and the exact volume or sensitivity of the stolen information remains undisclosed by both the threat actor and the victim. Solid Advance Inc., founded in 2004, provides customer relationship management software along with network design and cybersecurity services; any internal documents could therefore contain information related to its clients, product configurations, or operational data.
Why This Matters for You and Your Family
When a company that sells CRM and cybersecurity services is breached, the ripple effects reach ordinary customers and partners. If you or your family have ever interacted with a business that uses All Gather CRM, your contact details, purchase history, or support tickets may have been stored in the compromised environment. Even without exact victim counts, the disclosure indicates that internal files were exfiltrated, creating long-term exposure. Criminals do not limit themselves to corporate espionage; they look for any personally identifiable information that can be sold or used to launch follow-on attacks against individuals like you.
Credential reuse and personal data harvested from such incidents frequently surface in subsequent breaches, increasing the chance that your email, phone number, or passwords tied to other accounts could be linked back to you.
Doxxing and Identity-Chain Risks
Exfiltrated internal files often contain spreadsheets, customer databases, employee directories, or configuration notes that link names, email addresses, phone numbers, and sometimes physical addresses. Once attackers possess these connections, they can build identity chains that tie your online handles to your real-world identity. A single leaked work email can expose personal accounts that reuse the same password or security questions. For families this risk extends further: children’s gaming accounts frequently share the same household email or phone number, turning one corporate breach into multiple vectors for account takeover, harassment, or financial fraud.
AiLock Ransomware Group’s Known Track Record
Public reporting attributes the emergence of AiLock to late 2024. The group has targeted organizations across multiple countries with a classic double-extortion playbook: gain initial access, exfiltrate data, deploy ransomware to encrypt systems, then threaten to publish the stolen files unless a ransom is paid. Notable prior victims include mid-sized enterprises in manufacturing, healthcare, and technology sectors. The group typically maintains a leak site where it posts victim names and, in some cases, proof files or partial data samples. Their extortion style combines automated encryption with manual negotiation, often setting short deadlines to pressure victims into paying. While the Solid Advance Inc. listing does not detail a specific ransom demand, the group’s standard approach suggests that negotiations or further data releases could follow if the company does not comply.
What to do
- Run a DoxxScan to map every link between your handles, emails, phone numbers, and real identity, with no-subscription cleanup handled by specialists.
- Enable continuous DoxxScan monitoring across 15.4B+ breach records and 100+ platforms so the next exposure is caught in hours rather than months.
- Rotate any password you have used at Solid Advance Inc. or its All Gather CRM platform anywhere it is reused, and switch to 2FA through an authenticator app instead of SMS.
- Cover the entire household with DoxxScan family protection that extends to dependents and children’s gaming accounts that often chain back to the same contact details.
- Let remediation specialists manage takedown requests for any exposed personal information appearing on data-broker or extortion sites.
The Solid Advance Inc. incident shows how quickly a single corporate ransomware event can threaten the privacy of ordinary customers and their families. Staying ahead requires more than reactive checks; it demands continuous visibility and expert help when new leaks surface. DoxxScan by GalaxyWarden delivers that combination through continuous monitoring across 15.4B+ breach records and 100+ platforms, AI-powered identity-chain mapping, hands-on remediation by specialists, and full household coverage that includes children’s gaming accounts. Source: https://www.ransomware.live/id/U29saWQgQWR2YW5jZSBJbmMuQEFpTG9jaw==
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