Daniel Croft reports:

The incident was claimed by CyberN—–s members IntelBroker and EnergyWeaponUser, who originally said it was a Tesla EV charging station database containing files that belonged to Tesla.

However, thanks to a tipoff by researcher DarkWebInformer and IntCyberDigest, the threat actors amended the listing to say it was a “random 3rd party company which was hosting and holding their information” that owns the data and was breached.

[…]

IntCyberDigest then revealed that the data appeared not to come from Tesla but instead from a firm called Numocity, a manufacturer of EV charging software, middleware, smart charges and more.

Numocity has yet to publicly acknowledge the incident, as has Tesla or its CEO, Elon Musk.

Read more at CyberDaily.au.