
Hackers have gained access to the personal data of clients from the cryptocurrency exchanges Gemini and Binance, with some of the information already up for sale on the dark web, according to Dark Web Informer.
🚨🇺🇸Alleged Sale of 100K U.S. Gemini Cryptocurrency User Leadshttps://t.co/svdZIL6TO4
— Dark Web Informer – Cyber Threat Intelligence (@DarkWebInformer) March 27, 2025
A report states that on March 27, a dark web user known as AKM69 conducted the latest recorded transaction.
“The leaked database allegedly contains 100,000 records, each including full names, email addresses, phone numbers, and location data of individuals from the U.S., Singapore, and the U.K.,” Dark Web Informer noted.
The hacker categorized this dataset as part of a “broader campaign to sell consumer data for cryptocurrency-related marketing and fraud.”
A day earlier, on March 26, Dark Web Informer reported that another dark web user, kiki88888, had offered to sell login credentials for Binance users. The compromised data reportedly contained 132,744 entries.
🚨Alleged data leak of Binance emails/passwords logs
— Dark Web Informer – Cyber Threat Intelligence (@DarkWebInformer) March 26, 2025
The compromised data reportedly contains 132,744 lines of information
URL:LOGIN:PASS format pic.twitter.com/AgtDaUeY46
Dark Web Informer clarified that the data leak was not caused by a vulnerability in the exchanges themselves:
“Some of you really need to stop clicking random buttons.”
In a comment to Cointelegraph, Binance representatives denied any direct connection to the breach. According to them, hackers selling personal information gained access through malware infecting users’ devices.
In January, the email addresses of over 7 million OpenSea NFT marketplace users were leaked online.