sopower.com Listed by dragonforce Ransomware Group
industrial electrical service provider located in Baton Rouge, LA. Founded in 1994, it specializes in electrical testing, commissioning, maintenance, switchgear, transformers, and substation services, serving as a trusted ally for power infrastructure
On March 20, 2026, industrial electrical contractor sopower.com appeared on the leak site of the DragonForce ransomware group after attackers exfiltrated internal files during a ransomware incident.
Confirmed Facts from Reporting
Public reporting indicates that DragonForce listed sopower.com, a Baton Rouge, Louisiana-based company founded in 1994 that provides electrical testing, commissioning, maintenance, switchgear, transformers, and substation services. The listing confirms that internal company files were taken. The number of individuals whose data was exposed remains unknown. No specific samples of the stolen data have been publicly detailed beyond the general description of internal files.
Available reporting describes the incident as a classic ransomware attack involving both encryption and data exfiltration, with the leaked material now hosted on the group’s onion site. The exact date of initial compromise has not been disclosed.
Why This Matters for You and Your Family
When a local business like an electrical contractor suffers a breach, the consequences often reach far beyond the company. Vendors, partners, employees, and their families can find personal information entangled in the stolen files. Internal files frequently contain spreadsheets with names, addresses, phone numbers, dates of birth, Social Security numbers, insurance details, or payroll records.
Once that information leaves the company’s control, it can be sold, traded, or used to target you directly. Criminals combine it with data from other breaches to build complete profiles. For ordinary families in Louisiana or anywhere the company has done business, this means heightened risk of identity theft, fraudulent loans opened in your name, or sudden spikes in spam and phishing calls.
The Doxxing and Identity-Chain Implications
Ransomware leaks rarely stop at one company. Stolen internal files often include email addresses, usernames, and passwords that employees reuse at home. These credentials can unlock personal accounts, including gaming profiles belonging to you or your children. A single leaked work email can link to a Steam, Roblox, or Discord account, exposing chat logs, payment methods, and even home address details entered during registration.
Attackers follow these identity chains methodically. They map one handle to another until they assemble enough information for doxxing, SIM-swapping, or targeted extortion. Gaming accounts are especially vulnerable because children often use simple passwords and parents rarely monitor them. A breach like this one can quietly cascade into full household compromise months later.
DragonForce’s Publicly Known Track Record
Public reporting attributes DragonForce with emerging in 2024 as a ransomware operation that combines double-extortion tactics with aggressive data leaks. The group has listed victims ranging from small manufacturers to regional service providers. Their typical playbook begins with initial access through phishing or exploited remote desktop credentials, followed by rapid exfiltration of sensitive files before deploying ransomware. They then demand payment to prevent publication, using their leak site to apply pressure when victims refuse or miss deadlines. Exact success rates and total victims remain difficult to verify, but the group maintains an active presence on dark-web leak portals.
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 the service.
- Enable continuous DoxxScan monitoring across 15.4B+ breach records and 100+ platforms so the next leak exposing you or your family is caught in hours rather than months.
- Rotate every password used at sopower.com anywhere it is reused, replace it with a unique passphrase, and enable two-factor authentication through an authenticator app instead of SMS.
- Cover the entire household with DoxxScan family protection that extends to dependents and children’s gaming accounts, which often chain back to the same addresses and emails stolen in incidents like this.
- Let DoxxScan remediation specialists manage takedown requests across data brokers and exposed profiles while you focus on securing your own accounts.
The incident underscores a simple reality: data stolen from any company that holds your information can surface without warning and fuel larger attacks against your family. Staying ahead requires more than changing a few passwords. DoxxScan by GalaxyWarden delivers continuous monitoring across 15.4 billion breach records and over 100 platforms, AI-powered identity-chain mapping that connects scattered online handles to real identities, and hands-on remediation by specialists who handle the paperwork and negotiations for you. Its household coverage explicitly includes children’s gaming accounts that frequently become the next link in doxxing chains after credential leaks like the one at sopower.com.
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