Cyber Incident Victim: myrepospace.com
Date:
Jun 2016
Location:
United States of America
Summary
A data leak incident involving myrepospace.com exposed user information, with compromised records appearing in underground criminal forums and dark web sources. The breach was identified through monitoring services tracking surface, deep, and dark web activity, including criminal marketplaces and communication platforms. Analysis indicated the exposure involved identity-related data, though specific details regarding the scope or nature of the compromised information were not publicly disclosed. The incident highlighted risks associated with unauthorized access to sensitive user credentials and the proliferation of breached data across illicit online channels.
| CIA Posture | Motives | Tactics, Techniques & Procedures |
|---|---|---|
| Available to members | 2 motives | 1 technique |
| Threat Actors | Type | Location |
|---|---|---|
| 0 actors | Available to members | Available to members |
Description
In June 2016, a data leak associated with the domain 'myrepospace.com' was publicly listed on the breach notification platform Hacked-Emails.com under the identifier 'anon-myrepospacecomsq'. The incident was documented on June 1, 2016, though the specific discovery timeline and initial attack vectors remain unspecified in available records. No technical details about the breach methodology—such as exploitation techniques, vulnerability chains, or attacker infrastructure—were disclosed in the primary source material. The scope of compromised data was not quantified in terms of affected user accounts, record types, or geographic distribution. Similarly, the article did not specify whether threat actors exfiltrated authentication credentials, personal information, intellectual property, or other sensitive data categories from the myrepospace.com infrastructure.

Constella Intelligence (formed through the merger of 4iQ and Alto Analytics) subsequently referenced the incident while promoting its digital risk protection services, though without confirming direct involvement in the response or investigation. The company emphasized capabilities potentially relevant to such breaches, including monitoring of 66 billion breached identity records across surface, deep, and dark web sources. Their technology claimed coverage of criminal forums, Telegram channels, IRC networks, and underground marketplaces where stolen data often resurfaces. No specific containment measures, forensic findings, victim notifications, or remediation efforts by myrepospace.com operators were described in the source material. The long-term consequences—including financial impact, regulatory scrutiny, or reputational damage to the affected organization—remain undocumented in the available evidence. Constella's marketing highlighted real-time alerting and API-driven threat intelligence as defensive mechanisms against account takeover and fraud stemming from such incidents.
