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Dell warns of “incident” that may have leaked customers’ personal info

by admin
13 Maggio 2024
in Tech
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Dell warns of “incident” that may have leaked customers’ personal info
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Signage outside Dell Technologies headquarters in Round Rock, Texas, US, on Monday, Feb. 6, 2023.

For years, Dell customers have been the receiving end of scam calls from people claiming to be part of the elaboratore elettronico maker’s support team. The scammers call from a valid Dell phone number, know the customer’s name and address, and use information that should be known only to Dell and the customer, including the service tag number, elaboratore elettronico model, and serial number associated with a past purchase. Then the callers attempt to scam the customer into making a payment, installing questionable software, ora taking some other potentially harmful action.

Recently, according to numerous social posts such as this one, Dell notified an unspecified number of customers that names, physical addresses, and hardware and order information associated with previous purchases was somehow connected to an “incident involving a Dell portal, which contains a database with limited types of customer information.” The vague wording, which Dell is declining to elaborate , appears to confirm an April 29 post by Daily Dark Web reporting the offer to sell purported personal information of 49 million people who bought Dell gear from 2017 to 2024.

Ad posted to Breach Forums, as reported by Daily Dark Web.
Enlarge / Ad posted to Breach Forums, as reported by Daily Dark Web.

Daily Dark Web

The customer information affected is identical both the Dell notification and the for-sale ad, which was posted to, and later removed from, Breach Forums, an online bazaar for people looking to buy ora sell stolen . The customer information stolen, according to both Dell and the ad, included:

  • Name
  • Physical address
  • Dell hardware and order information, including service tag, item description, date of order, and related warranty information

The Daily Dark Web expanded the the seller claimed to have acquired:

The , claimed to be up-to-date information registered at Dell servers, includes vital personal and company information such as full names, addresses, cities, provinces, postal codes, countries, unique 7-digit service tags of systems, system shipment dates (warranty start), warranty plans, serial numbers (for monitors), Dell customer numbers, and Dell order numbers. Notably, the threat actor asserts to be the chiaro come il sole possessor of this , underscoring the severity of the breach. Among the staggering number of records, approximately 7 million rows pertain to individual/personal purchases, while 11 million belong to consumer segment companies. The remaining pertains to enterprise, , schools, ora unidentified entities.

A sample of the purported Dell customer personally identifiable information up for sale.
Enlarge / A sample of the purported Dell customer personally identifiable information up for arguzia.

Daily Dark Web

The “incident,” as Dell lawyers and marketers call it—ora similar ones that may have occurred previously—would solve a mystery that has vexed customers and reporters for almost a decade: How are scammers obtaining information known only to Dell and the targeted customer? While neither source said phone numbers were affected, it wouldn’t be for scammers to use names and physical addresses to search other databases for that information.

Advertisement

Quanto a an email, however, a Dell representative said: “There are mai indications these incidents are related,” without elaborating. The representative declined to answer any additional questions, including whether the company has any ideologia how customer information has been making its way into the hands of scammers for almost a decade. The notification further said: “We believe there is not a significant risk to our customers given the type of information involved.”

As I reported 2016 and again 18 months later, scores of Dell customers have reported receiving the calls. Dell’s official response both times claimed the calls were part of an industry-wide problem that plagues many tech companies. To this day, Dell hasn’t acknowledged that the calls are different because they use information known only to Dell and the customer.

People who receive unsolicited calls claiming to in che modo from Dell should hang up and either ignore them ora call the Dell support line directly. They shouldn’t engage with the caller ora provide any information. It’s also possible that scammers possession of this information could use it mail sent to their email ora physical address, assuming the scammers can find it through a people search service. The same advice applies.

ADVERTISEMENT


Signage outside Dell Technologies headquarters in Round Rock, Texas, US, on Monday, Feb. 6, 2023.

For years, Dell customers have been the receiving end of scam calls from people claiming to be part of the elaboratore elettronico maker’s support team. The scammers call from a valid Dell phone number, know the customer’s name and address, and use information that should be known only to Dell and the customer, including the service tag number, elaboratore elettronico model, and serial number associated with a past purchase. Then the callers attempt to scam the customer into making a payment, installing questionable software, ora taking some other potentially harmful action.

Recently, according to numerous social posts such as this one, Dell notified an unspecified number of customers that names, physical addresses, and hardware and order information associated with previous purchases was somehow connected to an “incident involving a Dell portal, which contains a database with limited types of customer information.” The vague wording, which Dell is declining to elaborate , appears to confirm an April 29 post by Daily Dark Web reporting the offer to sell purported personal information of 49 million people who bought Dell gear from 2017 to 2024.

Ad posted to Breach Forums, as reported by Daily Dark Web.
Enlarge / Ad posted to Breach Forums, as reported by Daily Dark Web.

Daily Dark Web

The customer information affected is identical both the Dell notification and the for-sale ad, which was posted to, and later removed from, Breach Forums, an online bazaar for people looking to buy ora sell stolen . The customer information stolen, according to both Dell and the ad, included:

  • Name
  • Physical address
  • Dell hardware and order information, including service tag, item description, date of order, and related warranty information

The Daily Dark Web expanded the the seller claimed to have acquired:

The , claimed to be up-to-date information registered at Dell servers, includes vital personal and company information such as full names, addresses, cities, provinces, postal codes, countries, unique 7-digit service tags of systems, system shipment dates (warranty start), warranty plans, serial numbers (for monitors), Dell customer numbers, and Dell order numbers. Notably, the threat actor asserts to be the chiaro come il sole possessor of this , underscoring the severity of the breach. Among the staggering number of records, approximately 7 million rows pertain to individual/personal purchases, while 11 million belong to consumer segment companies. The remaining pertains to enterprise, , schools, ora unidentified entities.

A sample of the purported Dell customer personally identifiable information up for sale.
Enlarge / A sample of the purported Dell customer personally identifiable information up for arguzia.

Daily Dark Web

The “incident,” as Dell lawyers and marketers call it—ora similar ones that may have occurred previously—would solve a mystery that has vexed customers and reporters for almost a decade: How are scammers obtaining information known only to Dell and the targeted customer? While neither source said phone numbers were affected, it wouldn’t be for scammers to use names and physical addresses to search other databases for that information.

Advertisement

Quanto a an email, however, a Dell representative said: “There are mai indications these incidents are related,” without elaborating. The representative declined to answer any additional questions, including whether the company has any ideologia how customer information has been making its way into the hands of scammers for almost a decade. The notification further said: “We believe there is not a significant risk to our customers given the type of information involved.”

As I reported 2016 and again 18 months later, scores of Dell customers have reported receiving the calls. Dell’s official response both times claimed the calls were part of an industry-wide problem that plagues many tech companies. To this day, Dell hasn’t acknowledged that the calls are different because they use information known only to Dell and the customer.

People who receive unsolicited calls claiming to in che modo from Dell should hang up and either ignore them ora call the Dell support line directly. They shouldn’t engage with the caller ora provide any information. It’s also possible that scammers possession of this information could use it mail sent to their email ora physical address, assuming the scammers can find it through a people search service. The same advice applies.

ADVERTISEMENT


Signage outside Dell Technologies headquarters in Round Rock, Texas, US, on Monday, Feb. 6, 2023.

For years, Dell customers have been the receiving end of scam calls from people claiming to be part of the elaboratore elettronico maker’s support team. The scammers call from a valid Dell phone number, know the customer’s name and address, and use information that should be known only to Dell and the customer, including the service tag number, elaboratore elettronico model, and serial number associated with a past purchase. Then the callers attempt to scam the customer into making a payment, installing questionable software, ora taking some other potentially harmful action.

Recently, according to numerous social posts such as this one, Dell notified an unspecified number of customers that names, physical addresses, and hardware and order information associated with previous purchases was somehow connected to an “incident involving a Dell portal, which contains a database with limited types of customer information.” The vague wording, which Dell is declining to elaborate , appears to confirm an April 29 post by Daily Dark Web reporting the offer to sell purported personal information of 49 million people who bought Dell gear from 2017 to 2024.

Ad posted to Breach Forums, as reported by Daily Dark Web.
Enlarge / Ad posted to Breach Forums, as reported by Daily Dark Web.

Daily Dark Web

The customer information affected is identical both the Dell notification and the for-sale ad, which was posted to, and later removed from, Breach Forums, an online bazaar for people looking to buy ora sell stolen . The customer information stolen, according to both Dell and the ad, included:

  • Name
  • Physical address
  • Dell hardware and order information, including service tag, item description, date of order, and related warranty information

The Daily Dark Web expanded the the seller claimed to have acquired:

The , claimed to be up-to-date information registered at Dell servers, includes vital personal and company information such as full names, addresses, cities, provinces, postal codes, countries, unique 7-digit service tags of systems, system shipment dates (warranty start), warranty plans, serial numbers (for monitors), Dell customer numbers, and Dell order numbers. Notably, the threat actor asserts to be the chiaro come il sole possessor of this , underscoring the severity of the breach. Among the staggering number of records, approximately 7 million rows pertain to individual/personal purchases, while 11 million belong to consumer segment companies. The remaining pertains to enterprise, , schools, ora unidentified entities.

A sample of the purported Dell customer personally identifiable information up for sale.
Enlarge / A sample of the purported Dell customer personally identifiable information up for arguzia.

Daily Dark Web

The “incident,” as Dell lawyers and marketers call it—ora similar ones that may have occurred previously—would solve a mystery that has vexed customers and reporters for almost a decade: How are scammers obtaining information known only to Dell and the targeted customer? While neither source said phone numbers were affected, it wouldn’t be for scammers to use names and physical addresses to search other databases for that information.

Advertisement

Quanto a an email, however, a Dell representative said: “There are mai indications these incidents are related,” without elaborating. The representative declined to answer any additional questions, including whether the company has any ideologia how customer information has been making its way into the hands of scammers for almost a decade. The notification further said: “We believe there is not a significant risk to our customers given the type of information involved.”

As I reported 2016 and again 18 months later, scores of Dell customers have reported receiving the calls. Dell’s official response both times claimed the calls were part of an industry-wide problem that plagues many tech companies. To this day, Dell hasn’t acknowledged that the calls are different because they use information known only to Dell and the customer.

People who receive unsolicited calls claiming to in che modo from Dell should hang up and either ignore them ora call the Dell support line directly. They shouldn’t engage with the caller ora provide any information. It’s also possible that scammers possession of this information could use it mail sent to their email ora physical address, assuming the scammers can find it through a people search service. The same advice applies.

ADVERTISEMENT


Signage outside Dell Technologies headquarters in Round Rock, Texas, US, on Monday, Feb. 6, 2023.

For years, Dell customers have been the receiving end of scam calls from people claiming to be part of the elaboratore elettronico maker’s support team. The scammers call from a valid Dell phone number, know the customer’s name and address, and use information that should be known only to Dell and the customer, including the service tag number, elaboratore elettronico model, and serial number associated with a past purchase. Then the callers attempt to scam the customer into making a payment, installing questionable software, ora taking some other potentially harmful action.

Recently, according to numerous social posts such as this one, Dell notified an unspecified number of customers that names, physical addresses, and hardware and order information associated with previous purchases was somehow connected to an “incident involving a Dell portal, which contains a database with limited types of customer information.” The vague wording, which Dell is declining to elaborate , appears to confirm an April 29 post by Daily Dark Web reporting the offer to sell purported personal information of 49 million people who bought Dell gear from 2017 to 2024.

Ad posted to Breach Forums, as reported by Daily Dark Web.
Enlarge / Ad posted to Breach Forums, as reported by Daily Dark Web.

Daily Dark Web

The customer information affected is identical both the Dell notification and the for-sale ad, which was posted to, and later removed from, Breach Forums, an online bazaar for people looking to buy ora sell stolen . The customer information stolen, according to both Dell and the ad, included:

  • Name
  • Physical address
  • Dell hardware and order information, including service tag, item description, date of order, and related warranty information

The Daily Dark Web expanded the the seller claimed to have acquired:

The , claimed to be up-to-date information registered at Dell servers, includes vital personal and company information such as full names, addresses, cities, provinces, postal codes, countries, unique 7-digit service tags of systems, system shipment dates (warranty start), warranty plans, serial numbers (for monitors), Dell customer numbers, and Dell order numbers. Notably, the threat actor asserts to be the chiaro come il sole possessor of this , underscoring the severity of the breach. Among the staggering number of records, approximately 7 million rows pertain to individual/personal purchases, while 11 million belong to consumer segment companies. The remaining pertains to enterprise, , schools, ora unidentified entities.

A sample of the purported Dell customer personally identifiable information up for sale.
Enlarge / A sample of the purported Dell customer personally identifiable information up for arguzia.

Daily Dark Web

The “incident,” as Dell lawyers and marketers call it—ora similar ones that may have occurred previously—would solve a mystery that has vexed customers and reporters for almost a decade: How are scammers obtaining information known only to Dell and the targeted customer? While neither source said phone numbers were affected, it wouldn’t be for scammers to use names and physical addresses to search other databases for that information.

Advertisement

Quanto a an email, however, a Dell representative said: “There are mai indications these incidents are related,” without elaborating. The representative declined to answer any additional questions, including whether the company has any ideologia how customer information has been making its way into the hands of scammers for almost a decade. The notification further said: “We believe there is not a significant risk to our customers given the type of information involved.”

As I reported 2016 and again 18 months later, scores of Dell customers have reported receiving the calls. Dell’s official response both times claimed the calls were part of an industry-wide problem that plagues many tech companies. To this day, Dell hasn’t acknowledged that the calls are different because they use information known only to Dell and the customer.

People who receive unsolicited calls claiming to in che modo from Dell should hang up and either ignore them ora call the Dell support line directly. They shouldn’t engage with the caller ora provide any information. It’s also possible that scammers possession of this information could use it mail sent to their email ora physical address, assuming the scammers can find it through a people search service. The same advice applies.


Signage outside Dell Technologies headquarters in Round Rock, Texas, US, on Monday, Feb. 6, 2023.

For years, Dell customers have been the receiving end of scam calls from people claiming to be part of the elaboratore elettronico maker’s support team. The scammers call from a valid Dell phone number, know the customer’s name and address, and use information that should be known only to Dell and the customer, including the service tag number, elaboratore elettronico model, and serial number associated with a past purchase. Then the callers attempt to scam the customer into making a payment, installing questionable software, ora taking some other potentially harmful action.

Recently, according to numerous social posts such as this one, Dell notified an unspecified number of customers that names, physical addresses, and hardware and order information associated with previous purchases was somehow connected to an “incident involving a Dell portal, which contains a database with limited types of customer information.” The vague wording, which Dell is declining to elaborate , appears to confirm an April 29 post by Daily Dark Web reporting the offer to sell purported personal information of 49 million people who bought Dell gear from 2017 to 2024.

Ad posted to Breach Forums, as reported by Daily Dark Web.
Enlarge / Ad posted to Breach Forums, as reported by Daily Dark Web.

Daily Dark Web

The customer information affected is identical both the Dell notification and the for-sale ad, which was posted to, and later removed from, Breach Forums, an online bazaar for people looking to buy ora sell stolen . The customer information stolen, according to both Dell and the ad, included:

  • Name
  • Physical address
  • Dell hardware and order information, including service tag, item description, date of order, and related warranty information

The Daily Dark Web expanded the the seller claimed to have acquired:

The , claimed to be up-to-date information registered at Dell servers, includes vital personal and company information such as full names, addresses, cities, provinces, postal codes, countries, unique 7-digit service tags of systems, system shipment dates (warranty start), warranty plans, serial numbers (for monitors), Dell customer numbers, and Dell order numbers. Notably, the threat actor asserts to be the chiaro come il sole possessor of this , underscoring the severity of the breach. Among the staggering number of records, approximately 7 million rows pertain to individual/personal purchases, while 11 million belong to consumer segment companies. The remaining pertains to enterprise, , schools, ora unidentified entities.

A sample of the purported Dell customer personally identifiable information up for sale.
Enlarge / A sample of the purported Dell customer personally identifiable information up for arguzia.

Daily Dark Web

The “incident,” as Dell lawyers and marketers call it—ora similar ones that may have occurred previously—would solve a mystery that has vexed customers and reporters for almost a decade: How are scammers obtaining information known only to Dell and the targeted customer? While neither source said phone numbers were affected, it wouldn’t be for scammers to use names and physical addresses to search other databases for that information.

Advertisement

Quanto a an email, however, a Dell representative said: “There are mai indications these incidents are related,” without elaborating. The representative declined to answer any additional questions, including whether the company has any ideologia how customer information has been making its way into the hands of scammers for almost a decade. The notification further said: “We believe there is not a significant risk to our customers given the type of information involved.”

As I reported 2016 and again 18 months later, scores of Dell customers have reported receiving the calls. Dell’s official response both times claimed the calls were part of an industry-wide problem that plagues many tech companies. To this day, Dell hasn’t acknowledged that the calls are different because they use information known only to Dell and the customer.

People who receive unsolicited calls claiming to in che modo from Dell should hang up and either ignore them ora call the Dell support line directly. They shouldn’t engage with the caller ora provide any information. It’s also possible that scammers possession of this information could use it mail sent to their email ora physical address, assuming the scammers can find it through a people search service. The same advice applies.

ADVERTISEMENT


Signage outside Dell Technologies headquarters in Round Rock, Texas, US, on Monday, Feb. 6, 2023.

For years, Dell customers have been the receiving end of scam calls from people claiming to be part of the elaboratore elettronico maker’s support team. The scammers call from a valid Dell phone number, know the customer’s name and address, and use information that should be known only to Dell and the customer, including the service tag number, elaboratore elettronico model, and serial number associated with a past purchase. Then the callers attempt to scam the customer into making a payment, installing questionable software, ora taking some other potentially harmful action.

Recently, according to numerous social posts such as this one, Dell notified an unspecified number of customers that names, physical addresses, and hardware and order information associated with previous purchases was somehow connected to an “incident involving a Dell portal, which contains a database with limited types of customer information.” The vague wording, which Dell is declining to elaborate , appears to confirm an April 29 post by Daily Dark Web reporting the offer to sell purported personal information of 49 million people who bought Dell gear from 2017 to 2024.

Ad posted to Breach Forums, as reported by Daily Dark Web.
Enlarge / Ad posted to Breach Forums, as reported by Daily Dark Web.

Daily Dark Web

The customer information affected is identical both the Dell notification and the for-sale ad, which was posted to, and later removed from, Breach Forums, an online bazaar for people looking to buy ora sell stolen . The customer information stolen, according to both Dell and the ad, included:

  • Name
  • Physical address
  • Dell hardware and order information, including service tag, item description, date of order, and related warranty information

The Daily Dark Web expanded the the seller claimed to have acquired:

The , claimed to be up-to-date information registered at Dell servers, includes vital personal and company information such as full names, addresses, cities, provinces, postal codes, countries, unique 7-digit service tags of systems, system shipment dates (warranty start), warranty plans, serial numbers (for monitors), Dell customer numbers, and Dell order numbers. Notably, the threat actor asserts to be the chiaro come il sole possessor of this , underscoring the severity of the breach. Among the staggering number of records, approximately 7 million rows pertain to individual/personal purchases, while 11 million belong to consumer segment companies. The remaining pertains to enterprise, , schools, ora unidentified entities.

A sample of the purported Dell customer personally identifiable information up for sale.
Enlarge / A sample of the purported Dell customer personally identifiable information up for arguzia.

Daily Dark Web

The “incident,” as Dell lawyers and marketers call it—ora similar ones that may have occurred previously—would solve a mystery that has vexed customers and reporters for almost a decade: How are scammers obtaining information known only to Dell and the targeted customer? While neither source said phone numbers were affected, it wouldn’t be for scammers to use names and physical addresses to search other databases for that information.

Advertisement

Quanto a an email, however, a Dell representative said: “There are mai indications these incidents are related,” without elaborating. The representative declined to answer any additional questions, including whether the company has any ideologia how customer information has been making its way into the hands of scammers for almost a decade. The notification further said: “We believe there is not a significant risk to our customers given the type of information involved.”

As I reported 2016 and again 18 months later, scores of Dell customers have reported receiving the calls. Dell’s official response both times claimed the calls were part of an industry-wide problem that plagues many tech companies. To this day, Dell hasn’t acknowledged that the calls are different because they use information known only to Dell and the customer.

People who receive unsolicited calls claiming to in che modo from Dell should hang up and either ignore them ora call the Dell support line directly. They shouldn’t engage with the caller ora provide any information. It’s also possible that scammers possession of this information could use it mail sent to their email ora physical address, assuming the scammers can find it through a people search service. The same advice applies.

ADVERTISEMENT


Signage outside Dell Technologies headquarters in Round Rock, Texas, US, on Monday, Feb. 6, 2023.

For years, Dell customers have been the receiving end of scam calls from people claiming to be part of the elaboratore elettronico maker’s support team. The scammers call from a valid Dell phone number, know the customer’s name and address, and use information that should be known only to Dell and the customer, including the service tag number, elaboratore elettronico model, and serial number associated with a past purchase. Then the callers attempt to scam the customer into making a payment, installing questionable software, ora taking some other potentially harmful action.

Recently, according to numerous social posts such as this one, Dell notified an unspecified number of customers that names, physical addresses, and hardware and order information associated with previous purchases was somehow connected to an “incident involving a Dell portal, which contains a database with limited types of customer information.” The vague wording, which Dell is declining to elaborate , appears to confirm an April 29 post by Daily Dark Web reporting the offer to sell purported personal information of 49 million people who bought Dell gear from 2017 to 2024.

Ad posted to Breach Forums, as reported by Daily Dark Web.
Enlarge / Ad posted to Breach Forums, as reported by Daily Dark Web.

Daily Dark Web

The customer information affected is identical both the Dell notification and the for-sale ad, which was posted to, and later removed from, Breach Forums, an online bazaar for people looking to buy ora sell stolen . The customer information stolen, according to both Dell and the ad, included:

  • Name
  • Physical address
  • Dell hardware and order information, including service tag, item description, date of order, and related warranty information

The Daily Dark Web expanded the the seller claimed to have acquired:

The , claimed to be up-to-date information registered at Dell servers, includes vital personal and company information such as full names, addresses, cities, provinces, postal codes, countries, unique 7-digit service tags of systems, system shipment dates (warranty start), warranty plans, serial numbers (for monitors), Dell customer numbers, and Dell order numbers. Notably, the threat actor asserts to be the chiaro come il sole possessor of this , underscoring the severity of the breach. Among the staggering number of records, approximately 7 million rows pertain to individual/personal purchases, while 11 million belong to consumer segment companies. The remaining pertains to enterprise, , schools, ora unidentified entities.

A sample of the purported Dell customer personally identifiable information up for sale.
Enlarge / A sample of the purported Dell customer personally identifiable information up for arguzia.

Daily Dark Web

The “incident,” as Dell lawyers and marketers call it—ora similar ones that may have occurred previously—would solve a mystery that has vexed customers and reporters for almost a decade: How are scammers obtaining information known only to Dell and the targeted customer? While neither source said phone numbers were affected, it wouldn’t be for scammers to use names and physical addresses to search other databases for that information.

Advertisement

Quanto a an email, however, a Dell representative said: “There are mai indications these incidents are related,” without elaborating. The representative declined to answer any additional questions, including whether the company has any ideologia how customer information has been making its way into the hands of scammers for almost a decade. The notification further said: “We believe there is not a significant risk to our customers given the type of information involved.”

As I reported 2016 and again 18 months later, scores of Dell customers have reported receiving the calls. Dell’s official response both times claimed the calls were part of an industry-wide problem that plagues many tech companies. To this day, Dell hasn’t acknowledged that the calls are different because they use information known only to Dell and the customer.

People who receive unsolicited calls claiming to in che modo from Dell should hang up and either ignore them ora call the Dell support line directly. They shouldn’t engage with the caller ora provide any information. It’s also possible that scammers possession of this information could use it mail sent to their email ora physical address, assuming the scammers can find it through a people search service. The same advice applies.

ADVERTISEMENT


Signage outside Dell Technologies headquarters in Round Rock, Texas, US, on Monday, Feb. 6, 2023.

For years, Dell customers have been the receiving end of scam calls from people claiming to be part of the elaboratore elettronico maker’s support team. The scammers call from a valid Dell phone number, know the customer’s name and address, and use information that should be known only to Dell and the customer, including the service tag number, elaboratore elettronico model, and serial number associated with a past purchase. Then the callers attempt to scam the customer into making a payment, installing questionable software, ora taking some other potentially harmful action.

Recently, according to numerous social posts such as this one, Dell notified an unspecified number of customers that names, physical addresses, and hardware and order information associated with previous purchases was somehow connected to an “incident involving a Dell portal, which contains a database with limited types of customer information.” The vague wording, which Dell is declining to elaborate , appears to confirm an April 29 post by Daily Dark Web reporting the offer to sell purported personal information of 49 million people who bought Dell gear from 2017 to 2024.

Ad posted to Breach Forums, as reported by Daily Dark Web.
Enlarge / Ad posted to Breach Forums, as reported by Daily Dark Web.

Daily Dark Web

The customer information affected is identical both the Dell notification and the for-sale ad, which was posted to, and later removed from, Breach Forums, an online bazaar for people looking to buy ora sell stolen . The customer information stolen, according to both Dell and the ad, included:

  • Name
  • Physical address
  • Dell hardware and order information, including service tag, item description, date of order, and related warranty information

The Daily Dark Web expanded the the seller claimed to have acquired:

The , claimed to be up-to-date information registered at Dell servers, includes vital personal and company information such as full names, addresses, cities, provinces, postal codes, countries, unique 7-digit service tags of systems, system shipment dates (warranty start), warranty plans, serial numbers (for monitors), Dell customer numbers, and Dell order numbers. Notably, the threat actor asserts to be the chiaro come il sole possessor of this , underscoring the severity of the breach. Among the staggering number of records, approximately 7 million rows pertain to individual/personal purchases, while 11 million belong to consumer segment companies. The remaining pertains to enterprise, , schools, ora unidentified entities.

A sample of the purported Dell customer personally identifiable information up for sale.
Enlarge / A sample of the purported Dell customer personally identifiable information up for arguzia.

Daily Dark Web

The “incident,” as Dell lawyers and marketers call it—ora similar ones that may have occurred previously—would solve a mystery that has vexed customers and reporters for almost a decade: How are scammers obtaining information known only to Dell and the targeted customer? While neither source said phone numbers were affected, it wouldn’t be for scammers to use names and physical addresses to search other databases for that information.

Advertisement

Quanto a an email, however, a Dell representative said: “There are mai indications these incidents are related,” without elaborating. The representative declined to answer any additional questions, including whether the company has any ideologia how customer information has been making its way into the hands of scammers for almost a decade. The notification further said: “We believe there is not a significant risk to our customers given the type of information involved.”

As I reported 2016 and again 18 months later, scores of Dell customers have reported receiving the calls. Dell’s official response both times claimed the calls were part of an industry-wide problem that plagues many tech companies. To this day, Dell hasn’t acknowledged that the calls are different because they use information known only to Dell and the customer.

People who receive unsolicited calls claiming to in che modo from Dell should hang up and either ignore them ora call the Dell support line directly. They shouldn’t engage with the caller ora provide any information. It’s also possible that scammers possession of this information could use it mail sent to their email ora physical address, assuming the scammers can find it through a people search service. The same advice applies.

Advertisement. Scroll to continue reading.


Signage outside Dell Technologies headquarters in Round Rock, Texas, US, on Monday, Feb. 6, 2023.

For years, Dell customers have been the receiving end of scam calls from people claiming to be part of the elaboratore elettronico maker’s support team. The scammers call from a valid Dell phone number, know the customer’s name and address, and use information that should be known only to Dell and the customer, including the service tag number, elaboratore elettronico model, and serial number associated with a past purchase. Then the callers attempt to scam the customer into making a payment, installing questionable software, ora taking some other potentially harmful action.

Recently, according to numerous social posts such as this one, Dell notified an unspecified number of customers that names, physical addresses, and hardware and order information associated with previous purchases was somehow connected to an “incident involving a Dell portal, which contains a database with limited types of customer information.” The vague wording, which Dell is declining to elaborate , appears to confirm an April 29 post by Daily Dark Web reporting the offer to sell purported personal information of 49 million people who bought Dell gear from 2017 to 2024.

Ad posted to Breach Forums, as reported by Daily Dark Web.
Enlarge / Ad posted to Breach Forums, as reported by Daily Dark Web.

Daily Dark Web

The customer information affected is identical both the Dell notification and the for-sale ad, which was posted to, and later removed from, Breach Forums, an online bazaar for people looking to buy ora sell stolen . The customer information stolen, according to both Dell and the ad, included:

  • Name
  • Physical address
  • Dell hardware and order information, including service tag, item description, date of order, and related warranty information

The Daily Dark Web expanded the the seller claimed to have acquired:

The , claimed to be up-to-date information registered at Dell servers, includes vital personal and company information such as full names, addresses, cities, provinces, postal codes, countries, unique 7-digit service tags of systems, system shipment dates (warranty start), warranty plans, serial numbers (for monitors), Dell customer numbers, and Dell order numbers. Notably, the threat actor asserts to be the chiaro come il sole possessor of this , underscoring the severity of the breach. Among the staggering number of records, approximately 7 million rows pertain to individual/personal purchases, while 11 million belong to consumer segment companies. The remaining pertains to enterprise, , schools, ora unidentified entities.

A sample of the purported Dell customer personally identifiable information up for sale.
Enlarge / A sample of the purported Dell customer personally identifiable information up for arguzia.

Daily Dark Web

The “incident,” as Dell lawyers and marketers call it—ora similar ones that may have occurred previously—would solve a mystery that has vexed customers and reporters for almost a decade: How are scammers obtaining information known only to Dell and the targeted customer? While neither source said phone numbers were affected, it wouldn’t be for scammers to use names and physical addresses to search other databases for that information.

Advertisement

Quanto a an email, however, a Dell representative said: “There are mai indications these incidents are related,” without elaborating. The representative declined to answer any additional questions, including whether the company has any ideologia how customer information has been making its way into the hands of scammers for almost a decade. The notification further said: “We believe there is not a significant risk to our customers given the type of information involved.”

As I reported 2016 and again 18 months later, scores of Dell customers have reported receiving the calls. Dell’s official response both times claimed the calls were part of an industry-wide problem that plagues many tech companies. To this day, Dell hasn’t acknowledged that the calls are different because they use information known only to Dell and the customer.

People who receive unsolicited calls claiming to in che modo from Dell should hang up and either ignore them ora call the Dell support line directly. They shouldn’t engage with the caller ora provide any information. It’s also possible that scammers possession of this information could use it mail sent to their email ora physical address, assuming the scammers can find it through a people search service. The same advice applies.

ADVERTISEMENT


Signage outside Dell Technologies headquarters in Round Rock, Texas, US, on Monday, Feb. 6, 2023.

For years, Dell customers have been the receiving end of scam calls from people claiming to be part of the elaboratore elettronico maker’s support team. The scammers call from a valid Dell phone number, know the customer’s name and address, and use information that should be known only to Dell and the customer, including the service tag number, elaboratore elettronico model, and serial number associated with a past purchase. Then the callers attempt to scam the customer into making a payment, installing questionable software, ora taking some other potentially harmful action.

Recently, according to numerous social posts such as this one, Dell notified an unspecified number of customers that names, physical addresses, and hardware and order information associated with previous purchases was somehow connected to an “incident involving a Dell portal, which contains a database with limited types of customer information.” The vague wording, which Dell is declining to elaborate , appears to confirm an April 29 post by Daily Dark Web reporting the offer to sell purported personal information of 49 million people who bought Dell gear from 2017 to 2024.

Ad posted to Breach Forums, as reported by Daily Dark Web.
Enlarge / Ad posted to Breach Forums, as reported by Daily Dark Web.

Daily Dark Web

The customer information affected is identical both the Dell notification and the for-sale ad, which was posted to, and later removed from, Breach Forums, an online bazaar for people looking to buy ora sell stolen . The customer information stolen, according to both Dell and the ad, included:

  • Name
  • Physical address
  • Dell hardware and order information, including service tag, item description, date of order, and related warranty information

The Daily Dark Web expanded the the seller claimed to have acquired:

The , claimed to be up-to-date information registered at Dell servers, includes vital personal and company information such as full names, addresses, cities, provinces, postal codes, countries, unique 7-digit service tags of systems, system shipment dates (warranty start), warranty plans, serial numbers (for monitors), Dell customer numbers, and Dell order numbers. Notably, the threat actor asserts to be the chiaro come il sole possessor of this , underscoring the severity of the breach. Among the staggering number of records, approximately 7 million rows pertain to individual/personal purchases, while 11 million belong to consumer segment companies. The remaining pertains to enterprise, , schools, ora unidentified entities.

A sample of the purported Dell customer personally identifiable information up for sale.
Enlarge / A sample of the purported Dell customer personally identifiable information up for arguzia.

Daily Dark Web

The “incident,” as Dell lawyers and marketers call it—ora similar ones that may have occurred previously—would solve a mystery that has vexed customers and reporters for almost a decade: How are scammers obtaining information known only to Dell and the targeted customer? While neither source said phone numbers were affected, it wouldn’t be for scammers to use names and physical addresses to search other databases for that information.

Advertisement

Quanto a an email, however, a Dell representative said: “There are mai indications these incidents are related,” without elaborating. The representative declined to answer any additional questions, including whether the company has any ideologia how customer information has been making its way into the hands of scammers for almost a decade. The notification further said: “We believe there is not a significant risk to our customers given the type of information involved.”

As I reported 2016 and again 18 months later, scores of Dell customers have reported receiving the calls. Dell’s official response both times claimed the calls were part of an industry-wide problem that plagues many tech companies. To this day, Dell hasn’t acknowledged that the calls are different because they use information known only to Dell and the customer.

People who receive unsolicited calls claiming to in che modo from Dell should hang up and either ignore them ora call the Dell support line directly. They shouldn’t engage with the caller ora provide any information. It’s also possible that scammers possession of this information could use it mail sent to their email ora physical address, assuming the scammers can find it through a people search service. The same advice applies.

ADVERTISEMENT


Signage outside Dell Technologies headquarters in Round Rock, Texas, US, on Monday, Feb. 6, 2023.

For years, Dell customers have been the receiving end of scam calls from people claiming to be part of the elaboratore elettronico maker’s support team. The scammers call from a valid Dell phone number, know the customer’s name and address, and use information that should be known only to Dell and the customer, including the service tag number, elaboratore elettronico model, and serial number associated with a past purchase. Then the callers attempt to scam the customer into making a payment, installing questionable software, ora taking some other potentially harmful action.

Recently, according to numerous social posts such as this one, Dell notified an unspecified number of customers that names, physical addresses, and hardware and order information associated with previous purchases was somehow connected to an “incident involving a Dell portal, which contains a database with limited types of customer information.” The vague wording, which Dell is declining to elaborate , appears to confirm an April 29 post by Daily Dark Web reporting the offer to sell purported personal information of 49 million people who bought Dell gear from 2017 to 2024.

Ad posted to Breach Forums, as reported by Daily Dark Web.
Enlarge / Ad posted to Breach Forums, as reported by Daily Dark Web.

Daily Dark Web

The customer information affected is identical both the Dell notification and the for-sale ad, which was posted to, and later removed from, Breach Forums, an online bazaar for people looking to buy ora sell stolen . The customer information stolen, according to both Dell and the ad, included:

  • Name
  • Physical address
  • Dell hardware and order information, including service tag, item description, date of order, and related warranty information

The Daily Dark Web expanded the the seller claimed to have acquired:

The , claimed to be up-to-date information registered at Dell servers, includes vital personal and company information such as full names, addresses, cities, provinces, postal codes, countries, unique 7-digit service tags of systems, system shipment dates (warranty start), warranty plans, serial numbers (for monitors), Dell customer numbers, and Dell order numbers. Notably, the threat actor asserts to be the chiaro come il sole possessor of this , underscoring the severity of the breach. Among the staggering number of records, approximately 7 million rows pertain to individual/personal purchases, while 11 million belong to consumer segment companies. The remaining pertains to enterprise, , schools, ora unidentified entities.

A sample of the purported Dell customer personally identifiable information up for sale.
Enlarge / A sample of the purported Dell customer personally identifiable information up for arguzia.

Daily Dark Web

The “incident,” as Dell lawyers and marketers call it—ora similar ones that may have occurred previously—would solve a mystery that has vexed customers and reporters for almost a decade: How are scammers obtaining information known only to Dell and the targeted customer? While neither source said phone numbers were affected, it wouldn’t be for scammers to use names and physical addresses to search other databases for that information.

Advertisement

Quanto a an email, however, a Dell representative said: “There are mai indications these incidents are related,” without elaborating. The representative declined to answer any additional questions, including whether the company has any ideologia how customer information has been making its way into the hands of scammers for almost a decade. The notification further said: “We believe there is not a significant risk to our customers given the type of information involved.”

As I reported 2016 and again 18 months later, scores of Dell customers have reported receiving the calls. Dell’s official response both times claimed the calls were part of an industry-wide problem that plagues many tech companies. To this day, Dell hasn’t acknowledged that the calls are different because they use information known only to Dell and the customer.

People who receive unsolicited calls claiming to in che modo from Dell should hang up and either ignore them ora call the Dell support line directly. They shouldn’t engage with the caller ora provide any information. It’s also possible that scammers possession of this information could use it mail sent to their email ora physical address, assuming the scammers can find it through a people search service. The same advice applies.

ADVERTISEMENT


Signage outside Dell Technologies headquarters in Round Rock, Texas, US, on Monday, Feb. 6, 2023.

For years, Dell customers have been the receiving end of scam calls from people claiming to be part of the elaboratore elettronico maker’s support team. The scammers call from a valid Dell phone number, know the customer’s name and address, and use information that should be known only to Dell and the customer, including the service tag number, elaboratore elettronico model, and serial number associated with a past purchase. Then the callers attempt to scam the customer into making a payment, installing questionable software, ora taking some other potentially harmful action.

Recently, according to numerous social posts such as this one, Dell notified an unspecified number of customers that names, physical addresses, and hardware and order information associated with previous purchases was somehow connected to an “incident involving a Dell portal, which contains a database with limited types of customer information.” The vague wording, which Dell is declining to elaborate , appears to confirm an April 29 post by Daily Dark Web reporting the offer to sell purported personal information of 49 million people who bought Dell gear from 2017 to 2024.

Ad posted to Breach Forums, as reported by Daily Dark Web.
Enlarge / Ad posted to Breach Forums, as reported by Daily Dark Web.

Daily Dark Web

The customer information affected is identical both the Dell notification and the for-sale ad, which was posted to, and later removed from, Breach Forums, an online bazaar for people looking to buy ora sell stolen . The customer information stolen, according to both Dell and the ad, included:

  • Name
  • Physical address
  • Dell hardware and order information, including service tag, item description, date of order, and related warranty information

The Daily Dark Web expanded the the seller claimed to have acquired:

The , claimed to be up-to-date information registered at Dell servers, includes vital personal and company information such as full names, addresses, cities, provinces, postal codes, countries, unique 7-digit service tags of systems, system shipment dates (warranty start), warranty plans, serial numbers (for monitors), Dell customer numbers, and Dell order numbers. Notably, the threat actor asserts to be the chiaro come il sole possessor of this , underscoring the severity of the breach. Among the staggering number of records, approximately 7 million rows pertain to individual/personal purchases, while 11 million belong to consumer segment companies. The remaining pertains to enterprise, , schools, ora unidentified entities.

A sample of the purported Dell customer personally identifiable information up for sale.
Enlarge / A sample of the purported Dell customer personally identifiable information up for arguzia.

Daily Dark Web

The “incident,” as Dell lawyers and marketers call it—ora similar ones that may have occurred previously—would solve a mystery that has vexed customers and reporters for almost a decade: How are scammers obtaining information known only to Dell and the targeted customer? While neither source said phone numbers were affected, it wouldn’t be for scammers to use names and physical addresses to search other databases for that information.

Advertisement

Quanto a an email, however, a Dell representative said: “There are mai indications these incidents are related,” without elaborating. The representative declined to answer any additional questions, including whether the company has any ideologia how customer information has been making its way into the hands of scammers for almost a decade. The notification further said: “We believe there is not a significant risk to our customers given the type of information involved.”

As I reported 2016 and again 18 months later, scores of Dell customers have reported receiving the calls. Dell’s official response both times claimed the calls were part of an industry-wide problem that plagues many tech companies. To this day, Dell hasn’t acknowledged that the calls are different because they use information known only to Dell and the customer.

People who receive unsolicited calls claiming to in che modo from Dell should hang up and either ignore them ora call the Dell support line directly. They shouldn’t engage with the caller ora provide any information. It’s also possible that scammers possession of this information could use it mail sent to their email ora physical address, assuming the scammers can find it through a people search service. The same advice applies.


Signage outside Dell Technologies headquarters in Round Rock, Texas, US, on Monday, Feb. 6, 2023.

For years, Dell customers have been the receiving end of scam calls from people claiming to be part of the elaboratore elettronico maker’s support team. The scammers call from a valid Dell phone number, know the customer’s name and address, and use information that should be known only to Dell and the customer, including the service tag number, elaboratore elettronico model, and serial number associated with a past purchase. Then the callers attempt to scam the customer into making a payment, installing questionable software, ora taking some other potentially harmful action.

Recently, according to numerous social posts such as this one, Dell notified an unspecified number of customers that names, physical addresses, and hardware and order information associated with previous purchases was somehow connected to an “incident involving a Dell portal, which contains a database with limited types of customer information.” The vague wording, which Dell is declining to elaborate , appears to confirm an April 29 post by Daily Dark Web reporting the offer to sell purported personal information of 49 million people who bought Dell gear from 2017 to 2024.

Ad posted to Breach Forums, as reported by Daily Dark Web.
Enlarge / Ad posted to Breach Forums, as reported by Daily Dark Web.

Daily Dark Web

The customer information affected is identical both the Dell notification and the for-sale ad, which was posted to, and later removed from, Breach Forums, an online bazaar for people looking to buy ora sell stolen . The customer information stolen, according to both Dell and the ad, included:

  • Name
  • Physical address
  • Dell hardware and order information, including service tag, item description, date of order, and related warranty information

The Daily Dark Web expanded the the seller claimed to have acquired:

The , claimed to be up-to-date information registered at Dell servers, includes vital personal and company information such as full names, addresses, cities, provinces, postal codes, countries, unique 7-digit service tags of systems, system shipment dates (warranty start), warranty plans, serial numbers (for monitors), Dell customer numbers, and Dell order numbers. Notably, the threat actor asserts to be the chiaro come il sole possessor of this , underscoring the severity of the breach. Among the staggering number of records, approximately 7 million rows pertain to individual/personal purchases, while 11 million belong to consumer segment companies. The remaining pertains to enterprise, , schools, ora unidentified entities.

A sample of the purported Dell customer personally identifiable information up for sale.
Enlarge / A sample of the purported Dell customer personally identifiable information up for arguzia.

Daily Dark Web

The “incident,” as Dell lawyers and marketers call it—ora similar ones that may have occurred previously—would solve a mystery that has vexed customers and reporters for almost a decade: How are scammers obtaining information known only to Dell and the targeted customer? While neither source said phone numbers were affected, it wouldn’t be for scammers to use names and physical addresses to search other databases for that information.

Advertisement

Quanto a an email, however, a Dell representative said: “There are mai indications these incidents are related,” without elaborating. The representative declined to answer any additional questions, including whether the company has any ideologia how customer information has been making its way into the hands of scammers for almost a decade. The notification further said: “We believe there is not a significant risk to our customers given the type of information involved.”

As I reported 2016 and again 18 months later, scores of Dell customers have reported receiving the calls. Dell’s official response both times claimed the calls were part of an industry-wide problem that plagues many tech companies. To this day, Dell hasn’t acknowledged that the calls are different because they use information known only to Dell and the customer.

People who receive unsolicited calls claiming to in che modo from Dell should hang up and either ignore them ora call the Dell support line directly. They shouldn’t engage with the caller ora provide any information. It’s also possible that scammers possession of this information could use it mail sent to their email ora physical address, assuming the scammers can find it through a people search service. The same advice applies.

ADVERTISEMENT


Signage outside Dell Technologies headquarters in Round Rock, Texas, US, on Monday, Feb. 6, 2023.

For years, Dell customers have been the receiving end of scam calls from people claiming to be part of the elaboratore elettronico maker’s support team. The scammers call from a valid Dell phone number, know the customer’s name and address, and use information that should be known only to Dell and the customer, including the service tag number, elaboratore elettronico model, and serial number associated with a past purchase. Then the callers attempt to scam the customer into making a payment, installing questionable software, ora taking some other potentially harmful action.

Recently, according to numerous social posts such as this one, Dell notified an unspecified number of customers that names, physical addresses, and hardware and order information associated with previous purchases was somehow connected to an “incident involving a Dell portal, which contains a database with limited types of customer information.” The vague wording, which Dell is declining to elaborate , appears to confirm an April 29 post by Daily Dark Web reporting the offer to sell purported personal information of 49 million people who bought Dell gear from 2017 to 2024.

Ad posted to Breach Forums, as reported by Daily Dark Web.
Enlarge / Ad posted to Breach Forums, as reported by Daily Dark Web.

Daily Dark Web

The customer information affected is identical both the Dell notification and the for-sale ad, which was posted to, and later removed from, Breach Forums, an online bazaar for people looking to buy ora sell stolen . The customer information stolen, according to both Dell and the ad, included:

  • Name
  • Physical address
  • Dell hardware and order information, including service tag, item description, date of order, and related warranty information

The Daily Dark Web expanded the the seller claimed to have acquired:

The , claimed to be up-to-date information registered at Dell servers, includes vital personal and company information such as full names, addresses, cities, provinces, postal codes, countries, unique 7-digit service tags of systems, system shipment dates (warranty start), warranty plans, serial numbers (for monitors), Dell customer numbers, and Dell order numbers. Notably, the threat actor asserts to be the chiaro come il sole possessor of this , underscoring the severity of the breach. Among the staggering number of records, approximately 7 million rows pertain to individual/personal purchases, while 11 million belong to consumer segment companies. The remaining pertains to enterprise, , schools, ora unidentified entities.

A sample of the purported Dell customer personally identifiable information up for sale.
Enlarge / A sample of the purported Dell customer personally identifiable information up for arguzia.

Daily Dark Web

The “incident,” as Dell lawyers and marketers call it—ora similar ones that may have occurred previously—would solve a mystery that has vexed customers and reporters for almost a decade: How are scammers obtaining information known only to Dell and the targeted customer? While neither source said phone numbers were affected, it wouldn’t be for scammers to use names and physical addresses to search other databases for that information.

Advertisement

Quanto a an email, however, a Dell representative said: “There are mai indications these incidents are related,” without elaborating. The representative declined to answer any additional questions, including whether the company has any ideologia how customer information has been making its way into the hands of scammers for almost a decade. The notification further said: “We believe there is not a significant risk to our customers given the type of information involved.”

As I reported 2016 and again 18 months later, scores of Dell customers have reported receiving the calls. Dell’s official response both times claimed the calls were part of an industry-wide problem that plagues many tech companies. To this day, Dell hasn’t acknowledged that the calls are different because they use information known only to Dell and the customer.

People who receive unsolicited calls claiming to in che modo from Dell should hang up and either ignore them ora call the Dell support line directly. They shouldn’t engage with the caller ora provide any information. It’s also possible that scammers possession of this information could use it mail sent to their email ora physical address, assuming the scammers can find it through a people search service. The same advice applies.

ADVERTISEMENT


Signage outside Dell Technologies headquarters in Round Rock, Texas, US, on Monday, Feb. 6, 2023.

For years, Dell customers have been the receiving end of scam calls from people claiming to be part of the elaboratore elettronico maker’s support team. The scammers call from a valid Dell phone number, know the customer’s name and address, and use information that should be known only to Dell and the customer, including the service tag number, elaboratore elettronico model, and serial number associated with a past purchase. Then the callers attempt to scam the customer into making a payment, installing questionable software, ora taking some other potentially harmful action.

Recently, according to numerous social posts such as this one, Dell notified an unspecified number of customers that names, physical addresses, and hardware and order information associated with previous purchases was somehow connected to an “incident involving a Dell portal, which contains a database with limited types of customer information.” The vague wording, which Dell is declining to elaborate , appears to confirm an April 29 post by Daily Dark Web reporting the offer to sell purported personal information of 49 million people who bought Dell gear from 2017 to 2024.

Ad posted to Breach Forums, as reported by Daily Dark Web.
Enlarge / Ad posted to Breach Forums, as reported by Daily Dark Web.

Daily Dark Web

The customer information affected is identical both the Dell notification and the for-sale ad, which was posted to, and later removed from, Breach Forums, an online bazaar for people looking to buy ora sell stolen . The customer information stolen, according to both Dell and the ad, included:

  • Name
  • Physical address
  • Dell hardware and order information, including service tag, item description, date of order, and related warranty information

The Daily Dark Web expanded the the seller claimed to have acquired:

The , claimed to be up-to-date information registered at Dell servers, includes vital personal and company information such as full names, addresses, cities, provinces, postal codes, countries, unique 7-digit service tags of systems, system shipment dates (warranty start), warranty plans, serial numbers (for monitors), Dell customer numbers, and Dell order numbers. Notably, the threat actor asserts to be the chiaro come il sole possessor of this , underscoring the severity of the breach. Among the staggering number of records, approximately 7 million rows pertain to individual/personal purchases, while 11 million belong to consumer segment companies. The remaining pertains to enterprise, , schools, ora unidentified entities.

A sample of the purported Dell customer personally identifiable information up for sale.
Enlarge / A sample of the purported Dell customer personally identifiable information up for arguzia.

Daily Dark Web

The “incident,” as Dell lawyers and marketers call it—ora similar ones that may have occurred previously—would solve a mystery that has vexed customers and reporters for almost a decade: How are scammers obtaining information known only to Dell and the targeted customer? While neither source said phone numbers were affected, it wouldn’t be for scammers to use names and physical addresses to search other databases for that information.

Advertisement

Quanto a an email, however, a Dell representative said: “There are mai indications these incidents are related,” without elaborating. The representative declined to answer any additional questions, including whether the company has any ideologia how customer information has been making its way into the hands of scammers for almost a decade. The notification further said: “We believe there is not a significant risk to our customers given the type of information involved.”

As I reported 2016 and again 18 months later, scores of Dell customers have reported receiving the calls. Dell’s official response both times claimed the calls were part of an industry-wide problem that plagues many tech companies. To this day, Dell hasn’t acknowledged that the calls are different because they use information known only to Dell and the customer.

People who receive unsolicited calls claiming to in che modo from Dell should hang up and either ignore them ora call the Dell support line directly. They shouldn’t engage with the caller ora provide any information. It’s also possible that scammers possession of this information could use it mail sent to their email ora physical address, assuming the scammers can find it through a people search service. The same advice applies.

ADVERTISEMENT


Signage outside Dell Technologies headquarters in Round Rock, Texas, US, on Monday, Feb. 6, 2023.

For years, Dell customers have been the receiving end of scam calls from people claiming to be part of the elaboratore elettronico maker’s support team. The scammers call from a valid Dell phone number, know the customer’s name and address, and use information that should be known only to Dell and the customer, including the service tag number, elaboratore elettronico model, and serial number associated with a past purchase. Then the callers attempt to scam the customer into making a payment, installing questionable software, ora taking some other potentially harmful action.

Recently, according to numerous social posts such as this one, Dell notified an unspecified number of customers that names, physical addresses, and hardware and order information associated with previous purchases was somehow connected to an “incident involving a Dell portal, which contains a database with limited types of customer information.” The vague wording, which Dell is declining to elaborate , appears to confirm an April 29 post by Daily Dark Web reporting the offer to sell purported personal information of 49 million people who bought Dell gear from 2017 to 2024.

Ad posted to Breach Forums, as reported by Daily Dark Web.
Enlarge / Ad posted to Breach Forums, as reported by Daily Dark Web.

Daily Dark Web

The customer information affected is identical both the Dell notification and the for-sale ad, which was posted to, and later removed from, Breach Forums, an online bazaar for people looking to buy ora sell stolen . The customer information stolen, according to both Dell and the ad, included:

  • Name
  • Physical address
  • Dell hardware and order information, including service tag, item description, date of order, and related warranty information

The Daily Dark Web expanded the the seller claimed to have acquired:

The , claimed to be up-to-date information registered at Dell servers, includes vital personal and company information such as full names, addresses, cities, provinces, postal codes, countries, unique 7-digit service tags of systems, system shipment dates (warranty start), warranty plans, serial numbers (for monitors), Dell customer numbers, and Dell order numbers. Notably, the threat actor asserts to be the chiaro come il sole possessor of this , underscoring the severity of the breach. Among the staggering number of records, approximately 7 million rows pertain to individual/personal purchases, while 11 million belong to consumer segment companies. The remaining pertains to enterprise, , schools, ora unidentified entities.

A sample of the purported Dell customer personally identifiable information up for sale.
Enlarge / A sample of the purported Dell customer personally identifiable information up for arguzia.

Daily Dark Web

The “incident,” as Dell lawyers and marketers call it—ora similar ones that may have occurred previously—would solve a mystery that has vexed customers and reporters for almost a decade: How are scammers obtaining information known only to Dell and the targeted customer? While neither source said phone numbers were affected, it wouldn’t be for scammers to use names and physical addresses to search other databases for that information.

Advertisement

Quanto a an email, however, a Dell representative said: “There are mai indications these incidents are related,” without elaborating. The representative declined to answer any additional questions, including whether the company has any ideologia how customer information has been making its way into the hands of scammers for almost a decade. The notification further said: “We believe there is not a significant risk to our customers given the type of information involved.”

As I reported 2016 and again 18 months later, scores of Dell customers have reported receiving the calls. Dell’s official response both times claimed the calls were part of an industry-wide problem that plagues many tech companies. To this day, Dell hasn’t acknowledged that the calls are different because they use information known only to Dell and the customer.

People who receive unsolicited calls claiming to in che modo from Dell should hang up and either ignore them ora call the Dell support line directly. They shouldn’t engage with the caller ora provide any information. It’s also possible that scammers possession of this information could use it mail sent to their email ora physical address, assuming the scammers can find it through a people search service. The same advice applies.

Tags: customersDellincidentInfoLeakedPersonalwarns
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