Skip to main content
Netherlands News in English

Main navigation

  • Top stories
  • Health
  • Crime
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Tech
  • Culture
  • Sports
  • Weird
  • 1-1-2
Image
Odido's headquarters building in The Hague. Undated
Odido's headquarters building in The Hague. Undated - Credit: Odido / Supplied - License: All Rights Reserved
Crime
Business
Odido
ShinyHunters
cybercrime
cyber attack
hack
data breach
Data leak
Friday, 27 February 2026 - 08:33

Share this article:

Hackers leak another 1 milion lines of stolen Odido data

The criminal hacker group ShinyHunters is going through with its threat to publish customer data stolen from Odido every day. The group so far published 2 million lines of data, half on Thursday and half early Friday morning, NOS reports. The number of customers affected is not yet known.

According to Odido, the hackers stole the data of 6.2 million current and former customers of the telecom company. The hackers claim they stole over 8 million people’s data.

The cybercriminals demanded a ransom of over €1 million from Odido, threatening to publish 1 million lines of data every day until the company pays. The deadline for the ransom was Thursday.

The stolen data contains names, home and email addresses, phone numbers, dates of birth, bank account numbers, and ID numbers. The hackers also stole customer records, which include data on whether customers paid their accounts, have a guardian, or failed to honor their contracts.

According to NOS, the hackers published some customer records, but so far have not published the phone numbers and email addresses of most victims. They did say they would publish increasingly sensitive information.

It is nearly impossible to find out immediately whether your data has been leaked. The data files are 10 gigabytes in size and were published on the dark web. Concerned Odido customers can check on the website haveibeenpwned whether their email address has been involved in data breaches. The Odido data breach is on the site.

Whether Odido will pay the ransom remains to be seen. The police always advise against this, as paying the ransom helps maintain the criminals’ business model.

More like this

Image
Odido's headquarters building in The Hague. Undated
Odido only noticed theft of 6.2 million people’s data when hackers informed them
Image
Odido's headquarters building in The Hague. Undated
Data of ministers, protected individuals found in massive Odido hack affecting millions
Image
Odido's headquarters building in The Hague. Undated
Hackers threatening to leak 8 million people's stolen data if Odido won't pay ransom
Image
Odido's headquarters building in The Hague. Undated
Stolen Odido data worth “gold” for criminals
Make NL Times your top Google source

Follow us:

Latest stories

  • Police employee held in custody on suspicion of bribery, cybercrime, money laundering
  • Man sentenced to 13 years for fatal stabbing, remains free due to terminal illness
  • Netherlands pushes EU to delay stricter methane climate rules over energy security fears
  • Max Verstappen left fuming after late mechanical failure ends British GP
  • Video: Four dead, two injured in single-vehicle crash in Limburg

Top stories

  • Video: Dutch police arrest more than 270 after A12 highway blockade near Utrecht
  • Dutch woman, travel partner abducted, sexually assaulted in Pakistan; Gang rape alleged
  • Video: Morocco World Cup win triggers unrest in The Hague, Rotterdam; 29 arrested
  • UK think tank links drone flights above Dutch air bases to Russian shadow fleet
  • Cape Verde fans in Netherlands emphasize pride in team after 3-2 loss to Argentina

© 2012-2026, NL Times, All rights reserved.

Footer menu

  • Change Privacy Settings
  • Privacy Policy
  • Contact
  • Partner Content