Researchers revealed what might be the biggest collection of stolen login credentials ever gathered in one location sometime in the middle of 2025. A compiled dataset, organized and searchable, contains about 16 billion records, including usernames, passwords, account details scraped from infostealer malware, phishing operations, and years of accumulated breach archives, covering accounts across Google, Apple, Meta, and dozens of other platforms. There was no significant zero-day exploit. No advanced nation-state assault. Just the patient, quiet harvesting of a system that was based on shared secrets and never sufficiently considered what would happen if those secrets were no longer kept secret. It wasn’t a particularly bad password. It failed gradually at first, then all at once, much like a slow leak eventually floods a basement.


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Frontier Enterprise: CSA: More authentication does not mean better security

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Global Banking and Finance Review: The Growing Role of FIDO and Passkeys in Banking Authentication

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ID Tech: RSA Extends Passwordless Authentication to Linux Environments

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