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Internet Yiff Machine: We hacked 93GB of "anonymous" crime tips

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Why This Matters

The recent leak of 93GB of sensitive crime tip data from P3 Global Intel's tip management system highlights significant cybersecurity vulnerabilities in platforms handling confidential law enforcement information. This breach underscores the critical need for robust security measures to protect sensitive data and maintain public trust in crime prevention tools. For consumers and the tech industry, it emphasizes the importance of safeguarding privacy and ensuring the integrity of digital systems used in law enforcement operations.

Key Takeaways

P3 Global Intel claims that it has “quickly become the new standard in tip management for Crime Stoppers programs, [Law Enforcement Agencies], and government agencies helping to solve and prevent crimes around the world.”

Its software does what it says on the tin: It accepts tips from the general public and then manages conversations between law enforcement and the tipper. Many of these tips are, by their very nature, extremely sensitive, and disclosure of the tip could imperil people’s lives. P3 promises on its websites that “your anonymity is protected at all times.”

But earlier this month, hackers calling themselves the, err, “Internet Yiff Machine” released 93GB of data that they claim was pilfered from P3’s tip-taking system.

(“Yiff” is, in the words of a Wikipedia article on the subject that I would NOT CLICK ON AT WORK due to its drawing of a cheetah with human genitalia, “a slang term used in the furry fandom to refer to pornographic content of anthropomorphic animal characters.”)

The data was sent to Straight Arrow News and to the Distributed Denial of Secrets (DDoS) leak archive. Given its sensitivity, DDoS is not releasing the data to the public, but it will make it available to “established journalists and researchers.”

In its write-up on the leak, Straight Arrow News noted that the archive “contains extensive personal data on people accused by tipsters: names, email addresses, dates of birth, phone numbers, home addresses, license plate numbers, Social Security numbers and criminal histories.” It also includes replies from investigators.

The software certainly doesn’t look very sophisticated; the Web version (there’s also an app) is a basic form with a file upload box and lots and lots of text fields, including “Gang Activity,” “Anyone Else Abusing Victim,” “Scars, Marks, Tattoos, Piercings,” “Where exactly is the weapon located?” and “How are drugs sold?”