Udemy Data Breach Results in 1.4 Million Accounts Leaked by ShinyHunters
- Data exposure: The April 2026 Udemy data breach exposed 1.4 million user accounts publicly following a sophisticated network intrusion.
- Threat actor identification: The notorious ShinyHunters extortion group claimed the cyberattack, demanding a ransom before publishing the stolen database on underground forums.
- Compromised personal information: Exposed records include names, physical addresses, phone numbers, and more.
In April 2026, ShinyHunters breached the global online learning platform Udemy. This incident left 1.4 million accounts leaked, directly impacting both registered students and educational instructors. The Have I Been Pwned (HIBP) repository officially indexed the compromised dataset on April 26, 2026.
ShinyHunters Extortion and Data Leak
The ShinyHunters extortion group claimed it had exfiltrated 1.4 million accounts and associated data, demanding a ransom under threat of publishing the data. Subsequently, the cybercriminals released the e-learning platform's stolen database.
The exfiltrated Udemy database contains highly sensitive personally identifiable information (PII), according to HIBP, including:
- Names
- Email addresses
- Phone numbers
- Physical addresses
- Employers
- Job titles
- Payment methods
Most critically, the data breach compromised instructors' payment method details, including PayPal, bank transfers, and cheques.
Escalating Cybersecurity Threats
This security failure highlights the escalating cybersecurity threats targeting large-scale educational repositories. Organizations managing extensive user databases must fortify their access controls, implement rigid encryption protocols, and continuously monitor their perimeter to mitigate the risk of data exfiltration events.
Recently, ShinyHunters this month released 78.6 million internal analytics records, reportedly from a confirmed Rockstar Games data breach.
The group was also involved in the March 2026 Hallmark data breach that exposed 1.7 million customer records and claimed an alleged Cisco breach linked to the Trivy supply chain compromise. In early March, ShinyHunters claimed to have compromised Salesforce, Snowflake, Okta, Sony, AMD, LastPass, and other accounts via a massive Salesforce breach.





