Hacking group OurMine has breached Vevo, a video hosting service, and has leaked files from the company's internal network.
The hacker group, who has a reputation for defacing websites and social media accounts, said it leaked data from Vevo after one of its employees was disrespectful to an OurMine member on LinkedIn.
The mysterious case of the Vevo files
The leaked data was published on the hacker group's website late last night. It included links to six data troves, offering 3.12TB of data for download.
A link to the page hosting the Vevo links was made publicly available a few hours ago, but by that time most of the files were removed.
At the time of writing, most of the download links redirect to a Vevo Box.com login page. The website also features a notice stating that the OurMine "deleted the files because of a request from VEVO."
Only five of the original six download links appear on the site, and only one of the five links provides any data for download.
To the best of our knowledge, the only person who saw the full Vevo files are Gizmodo reporters — who first
broke the story —, Vevo employees, and 0Research security researchers.
Gizmodo reported that the "majority of the [leaked] files seemed pretty mild—weekly music charts, pre-planned social media content, and various details about the artists under the record companies’ management," albeit a few documents contained sensitive materials.