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France’s ID Portal Hacked: 19 Million Records Up for Sale
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French authorities have added another case study to the growing argument against centralizing citizen identity data.
France Titres, formerly known as ANTS, operates the portal where residents apply for passports, national ID cards, residence permits, driver’s licenses, and vehicle registrations.
On April 15, something broke inside that system. A week later, the Interior Ministry confirmed what anyone watching digital ID schemes has been saying about this exact architecture for years, and the scale on offer from the attacker makes the warning harder to wave away.
A threat actor using the aliases “breach3d” and “ExtaseHunters” appeared on criminal forums on April 16, claiming to have stolen between 18 and 19 million records from the agency’s internal systems.
If accurate, that is roughly a third of France’s population sitting in a for-sale listing. The seller describes the haul as a fresh, structural compromise rather than a recycled dump, and is actively shopping it.
Early French press reports, including Le Figaro, initially pegged the figure at around 12 million accounts before later estimates climbed. The government has not confirmed any number.
What the ministry has confirmed is a “security incident that may involve the disclosure of data from both individual and professional accounts.”
Login credentials, full names, email addresses, dates of birth, unique account identifiers, postal addresses, places of birth, and phone numbers may all have been extracted. That combination is a starter kit for identity fraud, synthetic identity construction, and convincing phishing attacks against people who already expect email from French government domains.
The reassurances arrived on schedule. “The disclosure of data does not include additional data submitted during the various procedures, such as attachments,” the notice stressed.
“This personal data does not allow unauthorized access to the portal account.” Both statements may be accurate. Neither softens the reality that a government agency holding some of the most sensitive identifiers a person possesses has just lost control of a meaningful portion of them, with no disclosed user count and no attribution to any attacker.
The ministry has not said how many people are affected. It has not said who did it. It has not said how they got in. What it confirmed is that an investigation is running and that additional security measures have been put in place to keep the portal operating and improve data protection. Tightening the locks after the data has already left the building is a partial comfort at best.
A state that cannot keep the contents of its secure document portal secure is the same state currently pushing for backdoor access to end-to-end encrypted services and mandatory digital IDs for platform users. The pipeline from policy to breach disclosure is short.
This is the structural failure mode of national-scale digital identity. France Titres was not built as a surveillance tool. It was built to make bureaucracy function. The outcome is indifferent to intent.
Consolidating the documents that define a citizen’s legal existence into one portal creates one target, and the value of that target grows with every data field the state decides to demand. A breach of France Titres is not a breach of a retail site. It is a breach of the infrastructure of French legal identity itself.
The incident fits into a pattern that has become hard to overlook. Last week, France’s Education Ministry disclosed that attackers had pulled student data from the ÉduConnect platform after compromising a staff account in late 2025.
In February, intruders reached into France’s National Bank Accounts File, exposing information tied to roughly 1.2 million bank accounts out of more than 300 million entries. Earlier this year, cybercriminals made off with 15.8 million medical records from a French doctors’ ministry service. Four separate government-held databases, four separate failures, all involving records that citizens had no meaningful option to withhold.
The useful question is not whether France Titres will improve its defenses. It probably will. The question is why a government that has shown, repeatedly, that it cannot reliably protect data of this sensitivity keeps expanding the categories of data it demands from citizens, and keeps lobbying for access to data it does not yet hold.
Proponents of digital identity like to call these systems efficient and modern. The France Titres breach is a useful translation of what modern actually means here. It means the personal records that once sat in regional offices, on paper, inside locked filing cabinets, now live in databases reachable from anywhere on the internet by anyone resourceful enough to find a way in, and up for sale to anyone willing to pay for them.
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