Titelbild: Beispielbild Pixabay
.If you’ve recently received an email promising you the complete 1Win casino database with 96 million customer records for the incredible price of just $2000 in Bitcoin, congratulations — you’re not being personally hunted by elite hackers. You’ve simply joined the latest round of mass-produced, low-effort spam that’s flooding inboxes everywhere. After the big 1Win data breach back in November 2024, where roughly 96 to 100 million users had their emails, phone numbers, IP addresses, geolocation, dates of birth and SHA-256 hashed passwords stolen, some opportunistic bottom-feeders decided this was their big chance. Now they’re blasting out the same pathetic sales pitch to thousands of leaked addresses: “Hey, want 30 GB of stolen personal data? Contact me on Telegram @emaildba
and pay only in crypto. Let’s be very clear about this: buying, selling, or even entertaining the idea of purchasing this kind of stolen personal information is not just dumb — it’s straight-up illegal in most countries. It counts as handling stolen property and violates data protection laws like the GDPR. These clowns aren’t offering you some rare underground gem; they’re just trying to squeeze a few quick bucks out of a breach whose data has already been public for well over a year and is sitting in multiple breach databases anyway. It’s the same nonsense address that keeps popping up in dozens of similar scam emails. The whole operation is lazy, repetitive, and built on the hope that at least a handful of gullible people will bite. So if one of these mails landed in your inbox (and apparently a lot of people are getting them lately), do the smart thing: delete it immediately, mark it as spam, and under no circumstances reply or click on anything. You’re not in anyone’s crosshairs — you’re just another random email address on a leaked list that these script-kiddies are carpet-bombing with their copy-paste garbage. Feel free to share this post. The more people recognize this tired scam for what it is, the fewer will actually be stupid enough to send Bitcoin to some shady Telegram account run by someone whose greatest life achievement is spamming the same message hundreds of times a day.Stay smart out there. And remember: if a stranger offers you millions of people’s private data for two thousand bucks in cryptocurrency, it’s probably not a brilliant investment — morally, legally, or any other way you want to look at it.
hello
I am selling the database for the 1win casino. The database contains 96 million customers with full information, and the file is almost 30 GB in size.
In November 2024, the 1Win platform suffered a data breach in which attackers copied data for roughly 96-100 million users, including email addresses, telephone numbers, IP addresses, countries, geolocation, dates of birth and passwords hashed with SHA-256. The dataset was later added to the Have I Been Pwned? database
If you are interested in buying the database, contact me on Telegram at @emaildba
Price: $2000
I accept only Bitcoin or another cryptocurrency as payment method.
