NVIDIA has confirmed a cyberattack related to the GeForce NOW service. User data may have been compromised, however, the company reassures that the issue concerns only a regional partner serving several countries in Eastern Europe and Asia, and not NVIDIA's main infrastructure.
Cybercriminals have put user data up for sale
Information about the leak appeared on one of the hacking forums, where a cybercriminal tried to sell a database for around $100,000. According to initial reports, the database was said to include, among other things, email addresses, usernames, birthdates, subscription statuses, and information regarding two-factor authentication. Nvidia later confirmed that the attack targeted the company GFN.am, which oversees the regional operations of GeForce NOW in places including Armenia, Azerbaijan, Georgia, Kazakhstan, Moldova, Ukraine, and Uzbekistan. However, the company notes that Nvidia's main services were not compromised.
Passwords were meant to remain secure
According to official information, the cyber attack occurred between 20 and 28 March 2026. The stolen data mainly includes basic user information, such as names, email addresses, phone numbers, and account names. However, the most important thing is that, according to current findings, user passwords have not been leaked. The whole situation is additionally strange because the person posting the sales offer pretended to be from the well-known group ShinyHunters. The group later denied any connection to this attack. In the meantime, the post with the data sales offer has disappeared from the forum, which may indicate the removal of the advertisement or the sale of the database to another entity.
Nvidia has confirmed a data leak related to GeForce NOW, but the issue pertains solely to a regional partner operating outside the company's main infrastructure. According to current information, user passwords were said to remain secure.
source: Nvidia
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