Hackers Breach European Space Agency: 700GB of Space Secrets Leaked
The European Space Agency (ESA) suffered a massive data breach, with over 700 GB of sensitive data stolen in two incidents—one in December and another claimed by hackers this week. The group Scattered Lapsus$ Hunters says they exploited a known vulnerability dating back to September 2024, grabbing operational procedures, spacecraft details, and info on partners like SpaceX, Airbus, and Thales Alenia Space.
Details are brutal: the first leak saw 200 GB dumped on dark web forums, while the hackers now boast 500 GB more, including mission-critical docs for multiple space programs. They claim ESA hasn’t patched the flaw yet, meaning ongoing access to live systems. This on top of Microsoft’s Patch Tuesday bombshells like an actively exploited zero-day in SharePoint and expiring Secure Boot certs that could brick Windows boots by mid-year.
For developers, this is a wake-up call on unpatched vulns—your code could be the entry point for nation-state actors hitting aerospace or any high-stakes sector. Think supply chain risks: if ESA partners like SpaceX got exposed, your APIs or third-party libs might be next. Patch fast, scan for known CVEs religiously, and automate pen-testing to spot lateral movement before it’s game over.
Bottom line: Space might be the final frontier, but cybersecurity lapses make it hacker playground. Devs, prioritize those patches—2026’s off to a rough start.

