leaksear.ch has indexed a Telecom Egypt, TE Data, dataset containing 32 FreeRADIUS accounting records tied to broadband subscriber sessions, with the breach date listed as April 4, 2025 (leaksear.ch metadata). The exposed records include usernames, framed IP addresses, MAC address fields, session timestamps, network access identifiers, and traffic counters (leaksear.ch metadata).
What happened
Telecom Egypt describes itself as Egypt's first total telecom operator, providing fixed and mobile voice and data services (ir.te.eg). Its WE site lists home internet and fixed broadband services for consumers (beta.te.eg).
The available leak metadata describes the material as a TE Data FreeRADIUS accounting database extract, not a password dump or a public customer profile scrape (leaksear.ch metadata). No public report reviewed for this article confirmed the intrusion path, attacker, ransom demand, or company notice, so those points remain unconfirmed.
What data was exposed
The indexed records are searchable on leaksear.ch by ipAddress and username (leaksear.ch metadata). Other stored fields include session IDs, start, stop, and update timestamps, framed protocol, NAS IP and port data, called and calling station identifiers, accounting authentication and termination fields, session duration, and inbound and outbound traffic counters (leaksear.ch metadata).
FreeRADIUS documentation describes the radacct table as per-session accounting data keyed by acctuniqueid, with rows containing session start and stop times plus input and output octet counters (www.freeradius.org). In this leak, that means the sensitive value is not a reusable password, but the linkage of a broadband username to network-session metadata such as assigned IP address, device or station identifiers, and usage timing (leaksear.ch metadata).
Why this matters
Even at 32 records, RADIUS accounting data can link subscriber usernames to assigned IP addresses, device or network identifiers, timestamps, and usage volumes. That can support targeted phishing, account or billing impersonation, and correlation of a subscriber's activity windows. Egypt's telecom regulator says telecom users have a right to have personal data safeguarded and privacy protected, and publishes complaint channels for users who need to escalate issues with an operator (www.tra.gov.eg, www.tra.gov.eg). Readers who used TE Data broadband should check whether their broadband username or IP address appears in this leak.
Check your exposure
Vetted researchers and incident-response teams can request access or sign in if they already have access to check this dataset. Searchable pivots for this leak include ip address and username.