Flickr Exposed Data Breach and Warned Users of Phishing
“According to Flickr, user names, email addresses, IP addresses, and account activity may have been made public due to a bug at a third-party email provider.”
SmugMug owns the photo-sharing website Flickr. It boasts millions of active photographers and more than 100 million registered users.
Flickr alerted users to the possibility of a data breach brought on by a third-party email service bug. Names, email addresses, IPs, and account activity might have been made public by the problem. The business emphasized that neither payment information nor passwords were compromised. Within hours, Flickr shut down the impacted system.

Flickr, Data Breach
| “We would like to notify you about a security breach that may have compromised some of your personal data at one of our third-party service providers. This is what you should know.”
“We learned of a vulnerability in a system run by one of our email service providers on February 5, 2026. Some Flickr member information may have been accessed without authorization due to this vulnerability. Within hours of becoming aware of the issue, we blocked access to the compromised system.” “We really regret this situation and any worry it may have caused. We are taking immediate steps to prevent any similar vulnerabilities by strengthening our system design, conducting a thorough investigation, and improving our monitoring of third-party service providers since we take the privacy and security of your data very seriously.” |
The number of users affected and the supplier engaged were not disclosed by the company.
The business claims that after identifying the problem, it moved swiftly. They promptly disabled access to the compromised system, eliminated connections to the endpoint, and notified the third-party supplier, asking for a thorough investigation. The business started tightening controls over third-party services and doing a more thorough security examination at the same time. Additionally, the business informed the appropriate data protection authorities.

According to the firm, consumers should be on the lookout for phishing emails that appear to be about their account, check their account settings for odd behavior, and change their passwords on other services if they have been used previously.
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Suraj Koli is a content specialist in technical writing about cybersecurity & information security. He has written many amazing articles related to cybersecurity concepts, with the latest trends in cyber awareness and ethical hacking. Find out more about “Him.”
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