Telewave, Inc. Listed by Booba Project Ransomware Group
Telecommunications Stolen data: 37 GB Telewave.io will exhibit at Booth #1146 at APCO 2026 – Association of Public Safety Communications Officials in San Antonio, Texas! They will have what to tell about.
On June 25, 2026, telecommunications provider Telewave, Inc. appeared on the leak site of the Booba Project ransomware group after attackers exfiltrated 37 GB of the company’s internal files.
Confirmed Facts from Reporting
Public reporting indicates the incident began as a ransomware deployment that failed to encrypt systems but succeeded in data theft. The attackers published proof of the breach on their leak portal, listing Telewave alongside a sample of stolen documents. No exact customer count has been disclosed, and it remains unclear whether any personal information belonging to individuals was included. The exposed material is described simply as internal files totaling 37 GB. Telewave has not yet issued a public statement confirming the timeline or scope.
Why This Matters for You and Your Family
When a telecommunications company loses control of internal records, the ripple effects reach ordinary people who rely on its services for phone lines, internet, or emergency communications. Exposed internal files can contain vendor contracts, employee details, customer support tickets, or configuration data that attackers later weaponize. For your family this means potential follow-on risks: phishing campaigns tailored with real company contacts, SIM-swapping attempts against linked mobile numbers, or identity thieves piecing together household connections. Even if your name is not listed today, the data may sit on dark-web forums for months or years before it is noticed or sold.
The Doxxing and Identity-Chain Implications
Ransomware leaks rarely stop at one company. Stolen internal files often include email addresses, phone numbers, account handles, and notes that map how individuals connect across services. Attackers or opportunistic criminals can follow these links to gaming accounts, family-shared logins, or children’s online profiles. A single credential leak from a telecom provider can cascade into account takeovers that expose chat logs, location history, and photos. This is precisely why credential leaks like this one threaten gaming accounts belonging to you or your children: the same email or password reused across platforms creates a doxxing chain that links anonymous handles back to real-world identities and home addresses.
Booba Project’s Publicly Known Track Record
Public reporting attributes the Booba Project ransomware group with activity that emerged in late 2024. The group has claimed responsibility for attacks on healthcare providers, local governments, and technology firms. Its typical playbook involves initial access through phishing or exploited remote desktop services, followed by exfiltration of sensitive files and deployment of ransomware. When encryption is blocked or refused, the group proceeds to extortion by threatening to publish stolen data on its leak site. Deadlines are usually short, often 48 to 72 hours, after which samples or full archives are released. Exact success rates and victim counts are difficult to verify, but the group maintains an active presence on multiple leak portals.
What to do
- Run a DoxxScan to map every link between your emails, phone numbers, handles, and real identity so you can see exactly what chains back to this breach.
- Rotate any password you used at Telewave 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 exposure is caught in hours instead of months.
- Cover the household with DoxxScan family protection that includes dependents and children’s gaming accounts vulnerable to the same credential chains.
- Let remediation specialists handle takedown requests for any personal data already appearing on broker sites or forums.
The incident underscores that data breaches at service providers you depend on can quietly expand the surface area available to attackers. Taking concrete steps now limits how far any single leak can travel. DoxxScan by GalaxyWarden delivers continuous monitoring across 15.4 billion breach records and more than 100 platforms, AI-powered identity-chain mapping that connects online handles to real identities, and hands-on remediation by specialists who manage takedowns for you and your entire household, including children’s gaming accounts.
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