Kodak Admits Data Breach After ShinyHunters Hack Claims
Security WeekArchived Jun 18, 2026✓ Full text saved
Kodak told SecurityWeek it believes there is no threat to its systems or operations as a result of the cybersecurity incident. The post Kodak Admits Data Breach After ShinyHunters Hack Claims appeared first on SecurityWeek .
Full text archived locally
✦ AI Summary· Claude Sonnet
Commercial printing and imaging technologies company Kodak has confirmed suffering a data breach after the ShinyHunters cybercrime group claimed to have stolen information from its systems.
Kodak was named on the ShinyHunters website on June 15, with the hackers claiming to have obtained more than 2.2 million records of customer personal information and other corporate data.
The hackers threatened to leak the stolen data on June 18 unless the company pays a ransom.
Contacted by SecurityWeek, Kodak said it’s conducting an investigation with the aid of external cybersecurity experts and promised to share additional information “as appropriate”.
“Kodak recently discovered that an unauthorized third party illegally gained access to a limited amount of company data,” said a spokesperson for Kodak.
“Although our investigation is ongoing, we are confident the incident was limited in scope and has been contained and that there is no threat to our systems or operations as a result of the incident,” the spokesperson added. “We have also notified law enforcement and are continuing to support their investigation.”
ShinyHunters has been highly active over the past year, conducting massive data theft campaigns targeting widely used enterprise software.
In a recent operation, the group reportedly targeted at least 100 organizations by exploiting a zero-day vulnerability in Oracle PeopleSoft.
Related: ShinyHunters Claims Council of Europe Hack
Related: University of Nottingham Confirms Breach After Hackers Leak Data
Related: Hackers Leak DentaQuest Information Impacting 2.6 Million
Related: Carnival Data Breach Exposed 6 Million People
WRITTEN BY
Eduard Kovacs
Eduard Kovacs (@EduardKovacs) is senior managing editor at SecurityWeek. He worked as a high school IT teacher before starting a career in journalism in 2011. Eduard holds a bachelor’s degree in industrial informatics and a master’s degree in computer techniques applied in electrical engineering.
More from Eduard Kovacs
3 Recently Patched Fortinet FortiSandbox Vulnerabilities in Hacker Crosshairs
iRhythm Confirms Data Stolen in Hack
Cal Water Investigating Iranian Hackers’ Claims
Cisco Patches Another SD-WAN Zero-Day Exploited in Attacks
Ransomware Attack Shuts Down Mills of Australia’s Second-Largest Sugar Producer
Chinese Hackers Target Medical, Military, and AI Research in North America
Ozempic Maker Novo Nordisk Says Hackers Breached IT Systems
Maine Disables Data Breach Portal Due to Fake Submissions
Latest News
Webinar Today: How Modern Breaches Bypass MFA and Evade Detection
1Password Acquires Apono in Reported $250M-$300M Deal
Tenet Security Emerges From Stealth With $6 Million Seed Funding
Rockwell Automation Patches Vulnerabilities in ICS Controllers and Software
Microsoft Teams Relay Servers Abused in DragonForce Ransomware Attack
Microsoft Working on Patch for ‘RoguePlanet’ Zero-Day
Oracle’s Second Monthly Security Updates Deliver 245 Patches
Chrome and Firefox Updated to Patch Critical, High-Severity Vulnerabilities
Trending
Webinar: How Modern Breaches Bypass MFA And Evade Detection
June 17, 2026
Today’s attackers are no longer breaking in — they’re logging in. Join this live webinar as we break down the modern identity attack chain and examine how recent breaches exploited weaknesses in authentication, identity verification, and access management processes.
Register
Webinar: Modern Exposure Validation In The AI Era
June 24, 2026
AI has accelerated both sides of the fight. Adversaries are weaponizing vulnerabilities faster, while defenders are racing to ship detections and configurations. Join this live webinar as we explore how to prove your controls actually hold against new threats, map your security maturity, and unite breach simulation with automated pentesting into a single, coordinated program.
Register
People on the Move
Jonathan Trull has joined Oracle as Global Head of Cyber Defense.
Plaid has appointed Sean Cassidy as Chief Information Security Officer.
Ann Barron-DiCamillo has been named Executive Vice President and Global Chief Information Security Officer at U.S. Bank.
More People On The Move
Expert Insights
After AI Reaches Production: 12 Ways Security Teams Can Take Control
Security teams need more than visibility into AI applications, they need a repeatable framework for monitoring, investigating, and defending them in production. (Joshua Goldfarb)
Everybody Is Vibe Coding But Nobody Told The Security Team
AI-driven development is not something organizations can or should block. But it must be governed. (Danelle Au)
The Zero-Knowledge Threat Actor And The End Of Responsible Disclosure
AI can help attackers generate malware, create malicious payloads, bypass simple security checks, and convert vague malicious intent into functional code. (Etay Maor)
Raising The Cybersecurity Stakes: Ante Up For The Agentic Era
CISOs are now facing machine-speed attacks and asking, “How do I agent?” The industry must provide remediation at scale. (Nadir Izrael)
Caught Off Guard: Securing AI After It Hits Production
As enterprises rush AI projects into production, security teams are increasingly being forced into reactive mode. (Joshua Goldfarb)
Flipboard
Reddit
Whatsapp
Email