Online home improvement marketplace ManoMano has reportedly suffered a significant data breach impacting approximately 38 million users. Threat actors claim to have accessed and extracted a large volume of customer data, later advertising the database for sale on underground forums. While the company has investigated the claims, the incident raises serious concerns about data protection and third-party exposure within large-scale e-commerce platforms. According to reports, the attackers allegedly obtained customer records containing personal information such as names, email addresses, phone numbers, and order-related data. There is no confirmed indication that payment card details were exposed; however, the compromised dataset could enable phishing campaigns, credential stuffing, and identity fraud. The breach appears to have been disclosed after a threat actor publicly listed the stolen database for sale, suggesting possible unauthorized access to backend systems or a third-party service provider. At the time of reporting, no specific vulnerability (CVE) had been publicly attributed to the intrusion. The method of compromise remains under investigation, but large-scale database exfiltration typically involves credential abuse, misconfigured cloud storage, or exploitation of application-layer weaknesses. Given the scale of the alleged exposure, affected individuals may face elevated risk of targeted scams and account takeover attempts.
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