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Hakko Corporation

Medium

Hakko Corporation experienced a breach in March 2019 compromising nearly 10,000 customer records, including sensitive personal information and account credentials.

Records exposed
9,665 records
Breach date
Breach Mar 28, 2019
Last update
Updated Feb 6, 2025

What data was exposed?

Fields reported as compromised in this breach record.

Dates of birthEmail addressesGendersNamesPasswordsPhone numbersPhysical addressesUsernames

Why does this breach matter?

In-depth analysis of the breach and its implications.

In March 2019, Hakko Corporation, a Japanese company specializing in solder-related technologies, experienced a data breach impacting approximately 9,665 customer records. Exposed information included full names, email and physical addresses, phone numbers, usernames, genders, dates of birth, and unencrypted passwords. This incident underscores the importance of robust cybersecurity measures and awareness efforts to safeguard sensitive customer data.

Impact Analysis

Understanding the scope and consequences of this breach.

User Impact
Sensitive personal data of users, including plain text passwords, was exposed, increasing the risk of identity theft and unauthorized account access.
Business Impact
The breach likely impacted Hakko Corporation’s reputation and may have exposed them to regulatory scrutiny.
Affected Sectors
  • Consumer Electronics
  • Industrial Goods
Geographic Impact
  • Japan
  • Global

What You Should Do

Recommended actions to take in response to this breach.

If You Were Affected

  • Change your Hakko-related account passwords immediately and across any reused accounts.
  • Monitor your accounts for unusual activity.
  • Be cautious of phishing attempts leveraging this data.

Preventive Measures

  • Use unique and complex passwords stored in a password manager.
  • Enable multi-factor authentication (MFA) for additional security.
  • Regularly monitor the security of third-party services handling customer data.

Frequently Asked Questions

Common questions about this breach and what it means for you.

Potentially your full name, email, and physical addresses, phone number, username, gender, date of birth, and password (stored in plain text).