Amazon-owned video game broadcasting service Twitch has acknowledged a serious data breach. Twitch claims that a hacker broke into the service’s servers.
Due to “an error in a Twitch server configuration update that was subsequently accessed by a malicious third party,” Twitch has admitted that a hacker was able to obtain information that was unintentionally made public on the Internet.
“Our staff is working hard to grasp this scope,” the firm said on Twitter. We will update the community when further information becomes available,” the firm said further.
The whole credit card information was not disclosed, and there was “no indication that login credentials had been exposed,” according to company representatives, who gave their clients this assurance.
Instead of giving code that impacts specific user accounts, leakers have been more interested in revealing internal Twitch business resources and data.
According to Sundar Balasubramaniam, managing director of Check Point Software Technologies in India and the South Asian Association for Regional Cooperation (SAARC), any source code leak is bad and could have disastrous repercussions.
The leak is referred to as “part one,” which suggests that more will come. Balasubramaniam has issued a warning to all Twitch users to be cautious because it is anticipated that cyberattacks will increase in the near future.