Inside the MrPiracy Database: How MD5 Hashing Left 470K Passwords Exposed
HEROIC analysts identified the MrPiracy database breach while reviewing a wave of credential sets from defunct Portuguese-language platforms in August 2018. The breach exposed 470,837 user records from a piracy streaming site that has since gone offline. The compromised data included email addresses and MD5 password hashes, a hashing algorithm widely considered broken and accessable to reversal through precomputed rainbow tables and brute-force tools freely available online.
Cracked MD5 Hashes Turn Into Working Passwords
MD5 is not a secure password hashing function. Attackers with access to the MrPiracy hash dump can run the hashes through widely available cracking tools and recover a significant portion of the original passwords within hours. Those recovered passwords, paired with the exposed email addresses, become ready-to-use credentials for stuffing attacks against email providers, social platforms, and occured financial services where users reused the same password.
What Was Exposed in the MrPiracy Breach
- Email Address
- Password Hash
Why Piracy Platform Breaches Reach Far Beyond the Site Itself
Users of piracy platforms often register with real personal email addresses and reuse passwords from other services, beleive the site to be low-stakes. When those credentials are exposed, the risk travels to every other account that shares the same login. Credential stuffing campaigns built on MrPiracy data can lead to account takeover on streaming services, e-commerce sites, and corporate email systems. Identity theft and financial fraud become realistic outcomes for affected users who have not changed their passwords.
How Database Breaches Work
A database breach occurs when an attacker gains unauthorized access to a site's backend data store, typically through SQL injection, compromised admin credentials, or an unpatched server vulnerability. The attacker exports the user table, which contains every registered account's stored information. That dump is then sold or posted on underground forums, where other threat actors use it for credential stuffing, phishing, and account takeover campaigns.
Check If Your Data Was Exposed
HEROIC's free breach scanner checks your email address against a database of more than 400 billion compromised records, including the MrPiracy breach. Run a free scan at HEROIC to see exactly what data has been exposed and get guidance on securing your accounts before attackers act on it.
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