Ice Open Network Files Complaint After Insider Breach Exposes User Data

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Ice Open Network confirmed a security breach after four ex-partners from a third-party provider leaked user data, including emails and 2FA phone numbers. The incident stemmed from insider misuse, not a system hack. Funds and the blockchain remain secure. The team urges users to update 2FA ahead of a security-focused migration on April 21. Legal action is underway. The breach highlights the need for tighter controls amid rising inflation data concerns in the crypto sector.

Ice Open Network has confirmed a security breach involving its identity database, shaking user confidence while highlighting growing risks tied to third-party service providers in crypto.

The April 15 breach came from four former partners tied to a third-party service provider, who leaked user data like emails and 2FA phone numbers after accessing an external server.

Ice Open Network, which runs the $ION token and Online+ on BNB Chain, made it clear this wasn’t a system hack but an insider misuse from outsourced operations, not a failure of the core protocol.

Funds Safe, Core System Intact

Even though the breach sounds serious, the team says funds are safe, no private keys, no wallets touched. The core blockchain wasn’t hacked either, and activity on the network is still stable, so no direct money impact.

Emails, phone numbers, and identity-linked data got exposed, which raises privacy concerns. The team is now telling users to quickly update their 2FA to stay safe.

security alert

The company has already filed complaints with the Information Commissioner’s Office and is pursuing legal action against those responsible. A technical migration scheduled for April 21 aims to strengthen security, though temporary disruptions on the Online+ platform are expected.

From Price Crash to Full Restructure

This comes just weeks after the $ION 93% crash on April 7 from $0.003 to $0.00024. The CEO pinned it on a long-term service provider dumping tokens, calling it a funding shock, but didn’t share proof. Back then, the team admitted they had spent $18M, were burning $400K monthly, and were close to shutting down.

But things flipped fast. Within 48 hours, they slashed costs by 89% to around $45K/month, cut the team down to core devs, and rolled out a fresh 8-week roadmap, now aiming for a long-shot comeback toward a $1B valuation.

This breach also comes amid a surge in crypto security incidents, with over $606 million lost across protocols in just the first half of April 2026.

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