billions lost to cyberattacks

As cybersecurity threats intensified throughout 2025, data breaches reached unprecedented scales across critical industries, exposing tens of millions of personal records and highlighting systemic vulnerabilities in digital infrastructure. The year’s most devastating incidents demonstrated that even major technology providers and financial institutions remain vulnerable to sophisticated attack vectors.

Oracle Cloud suffered one of the most notable corporate breaches, with attackers exfiltrating 6 million records affecting over 140,000 tenants. The compromised data included Java KeyStore files, encrypted SSO passwords, key files, and enterprise manager JPS keys, suggesting the exploitation of an undisclosed vulnerability within the cloud infrastructure. This breach particularly underscored the cascading risks inherent in third-party service providers, where a single compromise can impact thousands of organizations concurrently. Experts estimate the total cost of the breach could exceed average breach costs of $4.35 million given the widespread impact.

Financial sector attacks proved comparably devastating, with Bank Sepah experiencing a massive breach that compromised over 42 million customer records. The exposed data encompassed account numbers, passwords, phone numbers, addresses, and complete transaction histories, with attackers directly targeting military and government sectors within Iran. This incident exemplified the growing trend of state-affiliated cybercriminal groups focusing on critical infrastructure and sensitive governmental data. Mobile banking platforms faced additional threats as malicious actors deployed fake banking applications through Telegram channels to steal user credentials and financial information.

Healthcare organizations faced substantial exposure through the Episource breach, which impacted more than 5.4 million patients. The compromised information included Social Security numbers, insurance identification numbers, medical diagnoses, and test results, creating considerable identity theft and privacy concerns for affected individuals. A major health insurance provider also disclosed a separate data breach involving patient records after hackers accessed sensitive information through a sophisticated phishing attack.

Transportation and technology sectors similarly sustained major incidents, including Zoomcar‘s breach affecting 8.4 million users and the exposure of millions of location records from Gravy Analytics. These breaches revealed names, contact information, addresses, and precise location data from sensitive government buildings.

Attack methodologies varied markedly, with ransomware groups like Rhysida claiming responsibility for multiple incidents, as others exploited software vulnerabilities or conducted supply chain compromises. The Roundcube webmail flaw exploitation and GitHub Action supply chain attack demonstrated attackers’ increasing sophistication in targeting widely-used platforms.

The geographic distribution of these breaches spanned North America, Europe, Asia, and the Middle East, indicating that cybersecurity failures represent a truly global crisis requiring coordinated international response and considerably improved protective measures across all sectors.

You May Also Like

184 Million Plaintext Passwords Found in Open Hacker Database—Are You in It?

A massive 184-million password leak exposes user accounts in plaintext format, and industry giants like Meta face billions in fines. Is your data already compromised?

Mcdonald’S Hiring Bot Left Millions Exposed With ‘123456’ Password—Experts Call It a Security Nightmare

A McDonald’s AI hiring bot guarded by a password a child could guess exposed 64 million job seekers’ private details. Security experts are furious.

Deloitte’s GitHub Credentials Reportedly Leaked — Is Source Code Now in the Wrong Hands?

A notorious hacker claims to possess Deloitte’s GitHub secrets, potentially exposing sensitive corporate data from one of the world’s largest consulting firms.

How a Simple Social Hack Exposed Millions in Allianz Life’s Massive Data Breach

A simple social hack exploited Allianz Life’s fortress-like security, exposing 1.4 million customers’ data in their biggest-ever breach. See how it happened.