**Austin, TX, United States, March 19th, 2025/CyberNewsWire/--**SpyCloud, the leading identity threat protection company, today released its
As cybercriminals move beyond single data points and leverage stolen data from a number of sources – breaches, malware and phishes – they are embracing a more sophisticated approach to identity exploitation, and organizations must shift their focus to a comprehensive and holistic defense strategy that accounts for the interconnected nature of digital identities.
Organizations have traditionally focused on securing individual account credentials, but SpyCloud’s research indicates that cybercriminals have expanded their tactics beyond conventional account takeover. Attackers now have access to extensive identity data from multiple sources—including data breaches, infostealer malware infections, phishing campaigns, and combolists—posing a challenge for organizations whose security measures have not yet adapted to address the full scope of interconnected identity exposures holistically.
SpyCloud’s collection of recaptured darknet data grew 22% in the past year, now encompassing more than 53.3 billion distinct identity records and over 750+ billion total stolen assets that are now circulating in the criminal underground, fueling identity-based cybercrime. These assets are a vast array of personal and professional credentials, session cookies, personally identifiable information (PII), financial data, IP addresses, national IDs and more that criminals are weaponizing in attacks against individuals and businesses.
"The cybersecurity industry has spent years defending against traditional credential-based threats, but the reality is that attackers have advanced as the data they have access to has exploded in volume,” said Damon Fleury, Chief Product Officer, SpyCloud. “Identity is the ultimate frontier of cyber risk, with users’ exposure across past and present, personal and professional identities the new attack surface. It requires organizations to rethink the risks posed by employees, consumers, partners and suppliers.”
Fleury continues, “At SpyCloud, we’ve created holistic identity analytics built on the industry’s largest collection of recaptured darknet data, enabling our customers to correlate disparate data points that encompass an individual’s digital footprint—providing a truly holistic view of identity risk.”
With the explosion of available identity data, attackers can now piece together historical and present-day records to bypass security barriers. Traditionally, cybersecurity teams were only able to see a fraction of an individual’s darknet exposures – primarily only the exposed assets tied to a corporate identity – which were not comprehensive nor in correlation with other exposures.
SpyCloud’s report shows that an individual’s identity exposure is more expansive than traditional cyber risk tools would indicate; in fact, it’s a sprawling web of interrelated assets that provide cybercriminals with a roadmap to exploit vulnerabilities and the keys to unlock valuable access.
"The record-breaking breaches of 2024, including the Mother of All Breaches (MOAB) and the National Public Data Breach, along with the growing use of infostealing malware and crafty phishing campaigns illustrate just how vast the pool of exposed identity data has become,” said Trevor Hilligoss, Senior Vice President of Security Research, SpyCloud Labs at SpyCloud.
“By understanding how cybercriminals aggregate stolen data and the new tactics and trends they are leveraging to assume even more valuable information and access, organizations can take proactive steps to mitigate identity-based threats from these large underground sources before they escalate."
The findings highlight that cybercriminals are moving well-beyond their own legacy tactics and businesses must recognize that traditional defenses are no longer enough. SpyCloud’s approach leverages holistic identity analytics, powered by the industry’s largest collection of recaptured darknet data, to help organizations correlate disparate identity elements and shore up identity threat protection measures, while mitigating risk more effectively. For further insights, the full 2025 SpyCloud Identity Exposure Report is available
Customers include seven of the Fortune 10, along with hundreds of global enterprises, mid-sized companies, and government agencies worldwide. Headquartered in Austin, TX, SpyCloud is home to more than 200 cybersecurity experts whose mission is to protect businesses and consumers from the stolen identity data criminals are using to target them now. To learn more and see insights, users can visit
Emily Brown
REQ on behalf of SpyCloud
spycloud@req.co
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