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Malwarebytes

Carnival confirms data breach impacting nearly 6 million Kali365 phishing kit bypasses MFA and steals Microsoft logins Company bragged phone mics could listen to conversations. They couldn’t. Fake LinkedIn emails abuse Adobe to track victims Fake software on GitHub and SourceForge distribute Deno RAT 700+ education and tech websites hijacked in huge ClickFix malware campaign Scammers pretending to be Microsoft had help from US executives A week in security (May 18 – May 24) Update Chrome now: Critical bugs could let attackers run code Microsoft Defender vulnerabilities are being exploited in the wild TikTok, YouTube, and Roblox face scrutiny, but age gates won’t fix child safety Catch spyware in the act with Windows Webcam Monitoring Researchers left AI agents alone in a virtual town and watched it all unravel Fake malware-signing service Fox Tempest dismantled by Microsoft Firefox 151 packs big privacy upgrades into a small update Biometrics, diagnoses, and bank details exposed in major healthcare breach Facebook scam promises cheap Aldi meat boxes, steals payment info instead YouTube wants your face to fight deepfakes Microsoft is changing Edge’s plaintext password behavior A week in security (May 11 – May 17) AI is distorting the Holocaust (Lock and Code S07E10) Attackers replaced JDownloader installer downloads with malware Meta’s confusing new approach to chat privacy Why Malwarebytes blocks some Yahoo Mail redirects Deepfake sextortion forces schools to remove student photos from websites Texas sued Netflix over claims it secretly collected and sold users’ data May 2026 Patch Tuesday: no zero-days but plenty to fix Fake Claude search results lure Mac users into ClickFix attack 1 in 8 employees have sold company logins or know someone who has Stolen Canvas data was “returned” after hacker agreement, Instructure says Yarbo responds to robot flaws that could mow down their owners A week in security (May 4 – May 10) Microsoft says Edge’s plaintext password behavior is “by design” ShinyHunters escalates Canvas attacks with school login defacements Massive AI investment scam network spans 15,500 domains If a fake moustache can fool age checks, is the Online Safety Act working? 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They just don’t (Lock and Code S07E08) Mythos: An AI tool too powerful for public release A week in security (April 13 – April 19) This old-school scam is still working “Your shipment has arrived” email hides remote access software Browser Guard gets even better with Access Control “iCloud storage is full” scam is back, and now it wants your payment details A fake Slack download is giving attackers a hidden desktop on your machine Booking.com breach gives scammers what they need to target guests AI clickbait can turn your notifications into a scam feed Fake YouTube copyright notices can steal your Google login From fake Proton VPN sites to gaming mods, this Windows infostealer is everywhere April Patch Tuesday fixes two zero-days, including one under active attack Credit Resources Vault: Why this credit email set off our scam alarms Omnistealer uses the blockchain to steal everything it can ChatGPT under scrutiny as Florida investigates campus shooting Simply opening a PDF could trigger this Adobe Reader zero-day A week in security (April 6 – April 12) Fake Claude site installs malware that gives attackers access to your computer ClickFix finds a new way to infect Macs Scammers pose as Amazon support to steal your account NSFW app leak exposes 70,000 prompts linked to individual users 30,000 private Facebook images allegedly downloaded by Meta employee This fake Windows support website delivers password-stealing malware Your extensions leak clues about you, so we made sure Browser Guard doesn’t Russian hacking group targets home and small office routers to spy on users Timeshare owners warned to watch out for cartel-linked scams Traffic violation scams swap links for QR codes to steal your card details Support platform breach exposes Hims & Hers customer data A week in security (March 30 – April 5) Killer robots are here. Now what? (Lock and Code S07E07) That dream job offer from Coca-Cola or Ferrari? It’s a trap for your passwords Blocking children from social media is a badly executed good idea Apple expands “DarkSword” patches to iOS 18.7.7 Malwarebytes Privacy VPN receives full third-party audit Wikipedia’s AI agent row likely just the beginning of the bot-ocalypse WhatsApp on Windows users targeted in new campaign, warns Microsoft Why we’re still not doing April Fools’ Day
Medical data of 500,000 UK volunteers listed for sale on Alibaba
2026-04-24 · via Malwarebytes

Half a million Britons signed up to help cure cancer. Their data ended up for sale on Alibaba.

The UK Biobank charity informed the British government of an incident concerning the medical data belonging to 500,000 British citizens being offered for sale on the Chinese e-commerce website Alibaba.

The National Data Guardian, Dr Nicola Byrne, said in a statement:

“People who generously share their health data to benefit others through medical research rightly expect it to be kept safe and for there to be accountability when things go wrong.”

Officials said the researchers downloaded the data under a legitimate contract, but its appearance on Alibaba shows how “approved” access can still turn into public exposure.

UK Biobank holds more than 15 million biological samples and detailed health records from volunteers recruited between 2006 and 2010, and researchers worldwide use it to study cancer, dementia, diabetes, and other chronic diseases.

UK Biobank normally signs contracts with vetted universities and private companies before it lets them access the data, but investigators traced the Alibaba listings to three research institutions. UK Biobank revoked their access and paused new data access while it strengthens security controls.

At least one listing reportedly contained data on all 500,000 volunteers, and Alibaba and Chinese authorities removed the adverts before anyone could confirm a sale.

The dataset comes from UK Biobank’s long‑running research cohort and includes genetic sequences, blood samples, medical imaging, and detailed lifestyle information used for global health research.

UK Biobank emphasizes that the data was “de‑identified,” meaning it didn’t include names, addresses, or NHS numbers. But it still contained granular demographics, such as gender, age, birth month/year, socioeconomic indicators, lifestyle details, and health measures. We have repeatedly seen that such data can be re‑linked to individuals by cross‑referencing with other public or commercial records.

Why China cares

US intelligence, policy reports, and academic work paint a consistent picture: China treats large, diverse human genomic and health datasets as a strategic resource for both economic and security reasons.

The US National Counterintelligence and Security Center (NCSC) explicitly states that the People’s Republic of China views bulk healthcare and genomic data as a “strategic commodity” to drive its biotech, AI, and precision medicine industries, and has invested billions in national genomics and precision‑medicine initiatives.

Large datasets from non‑Chinese populations are particularly valuable for building AI models and improving the global commercial competitiveness of Chinese pharma and biotech.

From an attacker’s or foreign intelligence perspective, UK Biobank is a “crown jewel” asset: It’s curated, high‑quality, population‑scale, and much more useful than random breach dumps. And because genetic data is immutable (unlike a password, it cannot be replaced), any compromise has very long‑term intelligence usefulness.

Last year, the Guardian reported that one in five successful UK Biobank access applications came from Chinese entities, including BGI, China’s flagship genomics company that was later placed on the US Entity List over concerns about its role in surveillance of minority populations.

China is not just stockpiling DNA for curiosity’s sake. It is building a global genomic map that covers adversaries as well as its own citizens.

Your genome data

There have been major concerns about genetic data ending up in the wrong hands, and for good reason. But I’m not going to say that volunteering your medical data for research is bad. Researchers often put the data to good use to help others.

But there are some good questions to ask before doing so.

  • Who runs the project and where is it based?
    Prefer non‑profit or academic biobanks with clear public‑interest mandates and strong oversight, rather than opaque commercial data brokers.
  • How do they store the collected data?
    Ask specifically about genomic data, raw sequencing files, links to medical records, and whether data is encrypted at rest and in transit.
  • Who can access the data and under what controls?
    Look for a formal access committee, strict contracts, and technical controls like secure analysis environments and limited export options, not “download CSV and walk away” models like the one that enabled the UK Biobank incident.
  • Are foreign entities allowed to access or copy the data?
    In light of US and UK government warnings about Chinese access to Western genomic data, it’s reasonable to ask whether data can be accessed, processed, or stored in jurisdictions with different security expectations.
  • How do they handle re‑identification risk?
    As we’ve discussed, “de‑identified” is not a magic word. Privacy experts and US intelligence have warned that health and genomic data can often be re‑identified when combined with other datasets.

If data containing your DNA is in someone else’s hands, you can’t put it back, but you can demand better governance, push institutions to treat genomic data as national‑security‑grade sensitive.

It also requires more skepticism of highly targeted scams. Attackers can use large combined datasets to craft convincing spear‑phishing or health‑related scams, for example, contacting you about a specific condition you or a family member has. Treat unsolicited health or DNA‑related emails, calls, and apps with extra suspicion.


What do cybercriminals know about you?

Use Malwarebytes’ free Digital Footprint scan to see whether your personal information has been exposed online.

About the author

Was a Microsoft MVP in consumer security for 12 years running. Can speak four languages. Smells of rich mahogany and leather-bound books.