Hackers Claim French Employment Leak Exposes Over 1M Records, Health Data

Hackers Claim French Employment Leak Exposes Over 1M Records, Health Data

Hackers Claim French Employment Leak Exposes Over 1M Records, Health Data

Source: tampatra/Envato

Hackers claim 1M+ records tied to French employment apps were exposed, including HR files, health data, worker details, and plaintext passwords.

Written By
Liz Ticong
Liz Ticong
Jun 26, 2026

A data leak claim tied to French employment services could reach into some of the most personal parts of a worker’s file.

Hackers using the aliases misere and ChimeraZ claim they obtained more than 1 million records from employment-related applications connected to the France Travail ecosystem, including files tied to HR, mobility, and workplace health processes.

The exposed information could give criminals enough workplace context to make scam emails, calls, or messages sound credible.

Worker files, health records, and passwords appear in the leak

FrenchBreaches identified the applications as tied to AKAOLIFE and FILDIRECT-RH. Data listed in the claim spans 14.4 million lines, nearly 60GB of database backups from 39 databases, and more than 10,000 source files. The largest named sets include:

  • 966,816 HR files
  • 1,003,047 professional mobility files
  • 38,138 workplace health monitoring files
  • 3,747 disability-related files
  • 26,684 accounts with passwords allegedly stored in plain text

The leak also lists application code, website security keys, Windows login data, and configuration files, raising the risk that the exposed systems could face further abuse.

Sensitive details sit inside the employment records

A worker file can expose a person’s life inside an organization, not just their contact details.

FuitesInfos said the records appear to include:

  • Names, birth dates, addresses, emails, and phone numbers
  • French social security numbers, employee IDs, and professional identifiers
  • Job history, grades, assignments, and seniority
  • Internal applications, mobility requests, and recruiter comments

The aliases behind the claim have appeared in other breach reports this month. ChimeraZ was recently linked to an alleged leak involving Krys, a local optical retailer, while misere was tied to France’s Tchap breach, which reportedly exposed 650,000 messages and 73,000 accounts.

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Scam risks for affected French workers

For affected workers in France, the main risk is impersonation. An attacker could pose as an HR team or a recruiter. Another route would be a fake message from a public-service contact or workplace health office.

A convincing message could refer to a real job history or a mobility request. From there, a scammer could send a fake login page. They could also ask for identity documents.

Plaintext passwords add a separate risk. Anyone who reused a work password elsewhere should change it and turn on multi-factor authentication.

Unexpected requests about employment records, medical visits, or disability paperwork should be checked through an official channel before sending documents or login details.

Related reading: A malware network linked to 27 million stolen logins has been taken down in a coordinated Europol-Microsoft operation.

Liz Ticong

Liz Ticong is a technology writer specializing in artificial intelligence, cybersecurity, software reviews, and emerging business technologies. With more than a decade of professional writing experience and over five years contributing technology content for TechnologyAdvice, she helps readers understand complex technologies and evaluate the tools that best fit their needs. Liz has extensive experience researching, testing, and analyzing software platforms, AI tools, and technology solutions. Her work includes in-depth software reviews, buyer’s guides, product comparisons, and technology news coverage designed to help businesses make informed purchasing and implementation decisions. She regularly evaluates AI applications, automation tools, cybersecurity solutions, and business software, providing practical insights based on hands-on testing and research. In addition to her work with TechnologyAdvice, Liz has contributed technology content to leading industry publications, including eWeek and TechRepublic. Her background in technical writing and software analysis enables her to translate complex technical concepts into clear, actionable guidance for both business and technology audiences. Liz holds a bachelor's degree in Broadcast Communication from the Polytechnic University of the Philippines and continues to expand her expertise through ongoing education in artificial intelligence and emerging technologies. Through her writing, she helps readers navigate a rapidly evolving technology landscape with practical, research-driven insights and real-world product analysis.