Security experts at Kromtech discovered a MongoDB exposed personal details of 25,000 users tied to the Bezop cryptocurrency.

Security researchers at cybersecurity firm Kromtech have discovered a MongoDB database containing the personal details of over 25,000 Bezop (BEZ) cryptocurrency users.

There are 1384 cryptocurrencies as of Jan 2018. One of them had a database of 25K active users with passwords and login details to the accounts/wallets, and also links to scanned documents like passports, driving licenses etc. — Bob Diachenko (@MayhemDayOne) April 10, 2018

John Mcafee, who is Bezop advisor, described Bezop as “a distributed version of Amazon.com,” but it also implements cryptocurrency based on Ethereum,

ICO of the week: BEZOP.IO. Bezop is a distributed version of https://t.co/d4FBsqmKpI. it allows simple and secure creation of e-commerce sites – searchable in the same manner as Amazon – but with no Amazon as middle man. This could be as huge as it gets in the blockchain world. — John McAfee (@officialmcafee) January 2, 2018

The database contained personal details information such as full names, home addresses, email addresses, encrypted passwords, wallet information, and scanned passports, driver’s licenses, or IDs.

Further analysis revealed that the database contained information relative a “bounty programme” launched by the Bezop development team launched early 2018.

One of the tables in the MongoDB database left exposed online was named “Bounty”, so the archive contained the information for the people who invested and participated in this part of the program.

Bezop team gave Tokens in exchange for promoting Bezop via online social media sites and forums or by writing blog posts about the cryptocurrency.

“On Mar 30, researchers at Kromtech Security identified a database open to the public containing full names, addresses, email addresses, encrypted passwords, wallet information, along with links to scanned passports, driver’s licenses, and other IDs for over 25,000 investors of the newly created Bezop.” reads the blog post published by Kromtech.

“Around the time of their ICO, which finished January 10, 2018. Bezop launched their first bounty program, in which people would earn Bezop Tokens in exchange for promoting Bezop via online social media sites like Facebook, posting to forums while using an approved Bezop signature on sites such as bitcointalk, moderation of forums, or by writing articles about Bezop.”

Bezop team confirmed the data leak and explained that the data were exposed while the dev team faced a DDoS attack on January 8.

“Bezop sent out a notice back on Jan. 8 during the ICO (initial coin offering), reporting both a DDoS attack and security holes exposing that data,” Deryck Jones, who is listed as Bezop.io’s CTO online, told Threatpost. “The Bezop notice went to all investors including me. It was an unfortunate incident and very disappointing.”

According to a Bezop spokesperson, the database contained details on around 6,500 ICO investors, while the remaining records were related to users who participated in the public bounty program.

The MongoDB was left exposed online without authentication until March 30, when Kromtech found it.

The MongoDB was promptly taken offline after Kromtech reported the discovery to the Bezop team.

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