Jailcore database leaks PII of inmates & correctional officers across US

Jailcore database leaks PII of inmates & correctional officers across US

The company that owns the database claim that since these are incarcerated individuals, their rights differ substantially from the free lot in terms of privacy.


A new data breach has taken place involving the information of inmates this time as opposed to conventional cases. The data exposure was discovered though an Amazon s3 bucket that belongs to a company named JailCore which is a “correctional facility management and compliance cloud-based application” as they advertise themselves.


Yet, the latter part of their service offering focused on creating a cloud-based application has resulted in this crisis in the first place. You see, to offer such a service, they needed to create a database online. However, when they did so, it resulted in this catastrophe where it was exposed to the public due to weak security measures.


Initially, the database was discovered this year on January 3 and reported to the firm 2 days later on January 5. However, due to a lack of action on behalf of the company, the researchers had to notify the USA’s Pentagon on January 15 which eventually led to the bucket being taken down.

According to vpnMentor’s blog post, containing 36,077 files to be precise, it hosted personally identifiable information (PII) of inmates that were present in specific detention centers along with the correctional officers. The information though can be divided into several categories.


See: 364 inmates hacked prison tablets to steal almost $225,000


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