• About WordPress
    • WordPress.org
    • Documentation
    • Learn WordPress
    • Support
    • Feedback
Skip to content
May 26, 2026
  • Linkedin
  • Twitter
  • Facebook
  • Youtube

Daily CyberSecurity

Zero-hour alerts. Unmatched analysis.

Primary Menu
  • Home
  • CVE Watchtower
  • Cyber Criminals
  • Data Leak
  • Linux
  • Malware
  • Vulnerability
  • Submit Press Release
  • Vulnerability Report
Light/Dark Button
  • Home
  • News
  • Data Leak
  • UK digital shopping website leaks tens of thousands of online shoppers’ payment details
  • Data Leak

UK digital shopping website leaks tens of thousands of online shoppers’ payment details

Ddos April 13, 2018 3 minutes read

According to The Register, DronesForLess.co.uk, the UK’s popular digital goods online shopping site, inadvertently disclosed thousands of purchase records and personal information of the police, military, government, and individual consumers. The root cause of the incident was that the site’s transaction database was accidentally exposed online and was not protected by encryption.

According to The Register, the incident was discovered by Alan Turnbull, a technical consultant from the UK-based Secret-bases. He informed his Gareth Corfield, The Report’s reporter, of his discovery as an exclusive message.

Alan told reporters that the operator of the DronesForLess.co.uk website did not properly protect the key parts of their network infrastructure. This made the site “completely open” for curious people, using Google only. Statement search makes it easy to find this data.

After learning of this news, The Register confirmed the authenticity of the incident. They found that about 13,000 dates indicated that purchase records for the period from October 2015 to March 31, 2018, were stored on DronesForLess.co.uk’s website server, and these data were not encrypted or even a password was set. protection.

The severity of the incident is self-evident. This situation means that anyone who can find this website server on the Internet can arbitrarily browse the above data.

According to the report’s description, these purchase records also contain the consumer’s detailed personal information, such as name, address, phone number, email address, IP address, device information used to access the website, details of the purchased product, issuing bank And the last four digits of the payment card number.

 

From the purchase records, there is no shortage of workers from the police, the military, and the government, such as:

  • A purchase of a DJI Phantom 3 quadcopter by a serving Metropolitan Police officer, delivered to the force’s Empress State Building HQ in London, and made with a non-police email address composed of his unit’s very distinctive abbreviation
  • A British Army Reserve major who had an £1,100 drone posted to his unit’s HQ
  • A member of the Ministry of Defence’s procurement division who bought a DJI Inspire 2, complete with spare battery and accidental damage insurance
  • A member of the National Crime Agency, who appeared to have used his ***@nca.x.gsi.gov.uk secure email address to buy a Nikon Coolpix digital camera

 

The Register said that this is only a very small part of the purchase record. Other consumers include the staff of the UK’s private defense research institute QinetiQ, the British National Defense Science and Technology Laboratory’s Radar R&D base in Perth Taushan, British Army infantry trials and development. Troops, as well as large and small police stations, local councils, and government agencies across the country. Of course, there are still more private orders.

It is worth noting that from the types of goods purchased by the police, the military, and government workers, most of them are cameras and other optical devices and drones. It is unclear whether these products are from personal or official purchases.

The Register had reported this data breach to DronesForLess.co.uk on Tuesday. The website did not give any explanation for this matter, but only deleted all the leaked data. Now the data has been Unable to be visited by the public.

Rate this post

Support Our Threat Intelligence

If you find our CVE report and cybersecurity news helpful, consider supporting our work.

Buy Me a Coffee Logo Buy Me a Coffee PayPal
Crypto QR Code
USDT (TRC20):
TN8BdV8cp4T1Cd28gK9qTAnZknzzuwyUtm
USDT (ERC20):
0x3725e1a7d3bc5765499fa6aaafe307fabcd75bce

Share this article:

Facebook Post LinkedIn Telegram

Related posts:

  1. Ubisoft Hit by New Data Breach
  2. AnyDesk’s Cybersecurity Breach: Unveiling the Recent Attack
  3. Your Keyboard May Be Spilling Your Secrets – Critical Flaws Expose Keystrokes of Millions
  4. Hardcoded Cloud Credentials Found in Popular Mobile Apps: A Major Security Flaw
  5. The Great Firewall Leaks: A 600GB Trove of Secrets Exposed
Tags: DronesForLess

Search

Translation

CVE WATCHTOWER
🚨

Receive alerts for vulnerabilities being exploited in the wild.

⚑

Get notified instantly when a Proof of Concept (PoC) exploit is published.

πŸ”

Access critical info on vulnerabilities even when marked as "RESERVED".

🧠

Insights powered by decades of expertise and global intelligence sources.

🎯

Customize alerts with up to 10 keywords for your specific tech stack.

πŸ“Š

Export the raw CVE database for SIEM integration and reporting.

Upgrade Package

πŸ”΄ Live Critical Threats

  • CVE-2026-42773CVSS 9.3
    Improper Neutralization of Special Elements used in an SQL Command ('SQL Injection')...
  • CVE-2026-42774CVSS 9.3
    Improper Neutralization of Special Elements used in an SQL Command ('SQL Injection')...
  • CVE-2026-9478CVSS 9.8
    A weakness has been identified in Totolink A8000RU 7.1cu.643_b20200521. Impacted is the...
  • CVE-2026-9477CVSS 9.8
    A security flaw has been discovered in Totolink A8000RU 7.1cu.643_b20200521. This issue...
  • CVE-2026-9476CVSS 9.8
    A vulnerability was identified in Totolink A8000RU 7.1cu.643_b20200521. This vulnerability affects the...
  • CVE-2026-9475CVSS 9.8
    A vulnerability was determined in Totolink A8000RU 7.1cu.643_b20200521. This affects the function...
  • CVE-2026-9458CVSS 9.8
    A vulnerability was identified in Totolink A8000RU 7.1cu.643_b20200521. The impacted element is...
  • CVE-2026-9457CVSS 9.8
    A vulnerability was determined in Totolink A8000RU 7.1cu.643_b20200521. The affected element is...
  • CVE-2026-9456CVSS 9.8
    A vulnerability was found in Totolink A8000RU 7.1cu.643_b20200521. Impacted is the function...
  • CVE-2026-9455CVSS 9.8
    A vulnerability has been found in Totolink A8000RU 7.1cu.643_b20200521. This issue affects...
Powered by CVE WATCHTOWER

Recent Zero-Day Vulnerabilities

  • Exploited in the Wild: Critical OWA Spoofing Flaw (CVE-2026-42897) Hits On-Premises Exchange Servers
  • Exploited in the Wild: Maximum CVSS 10 SD-WAN Flaw (CVE-2026-20182) Grants Admin Control
  • Exploited in the Wild: Critical 9.8 CVSS RCE Hits Canon GUARDIANWALL MailSuite
  • Exploit Code Released: Public PoC Dumps for Windows BitLocker Bypass and SYSTEM Elevation Zero-Days
  • Exploited in the Wild: “Dirty Frag” Linux Vulnerability Grants Instant Root Access
  • Under Active Attack: Ivanti EPMM Zero-Day Exploited in the Wild via Harvested Admin Credentials
Our Websites
  • Penetration Testing Tools
  • The Daily Information Technology
  • Daily CyberSecurity

    • About SecurityOnline.info
    • Advertise with us
    • Announcement
    • Contact
    • Contributor Register
    • Login
    • About SecurityOnline.info
    • Advertise on SecurityOnline.info
    • Contact Us

    When you purchase through links on our site, we may earn an affiliate commission. Here’s how it works

    • Disclaimer
    • Privacy Policy
    • DMCA NOTICE
    • Linkedin
    • Twitter
    • Facebook
    • Youtube
    Copyright Daily CyberSecurity Β© All rights reserved.