Privacy

How Have I Been Pwned (HIBP) handles privacy

Introduction

HIBP only exists in the first place because of violations of privacy. Our data is leaked, sold, redistributed and abused to our detriment and beyond our control. HIBP was established as a free service in 2013 to help give us visibility as to how our personal data spreads. Whilst we may no longer be able to control it once breached, we can at least understand what's been leaked, where it's been leaked from and what precautionary measures we can now take as a result.

This page details how the privacy of personal data is handled within HIBP and what information is collected when you use the service.


Breach data stored in HIBP

When a data breach is loaded into HIBP, the email addresses are stored in the online system. In some cases, phone numbers may be loaded in separately where they exist in an isolated data store not attached to any other personally identifiable information (i.e. not next to corresponding email addresses). No other data of any kind (names, phone numbers, etc) are stored on data load. HIBP also stores a list of data classes that were impacted in each breach. For example, it will state that email addresses and passwords appeared in a breach, but no information about which email addresses had corresponding passwords nor what those passwords are is stored.

When data is loaded into the Pwned Passwords service, only SHA-1 hashes of the password are stored. No identifying data about who the password belonged to is stored. Read more about why passwords are hashed in this fashion.


When you search for an email address or phone number

Searching for an email address or phone number only ever retrieves the data from storage then returns it in the response, the searched data is never explicitly stored anywhere. See the Logging section below for situations in which it may be implicitly stored.

Data breaches flagged as sensitive are not returned in public searches, they can only be viewed by using the notification service and verifying ownership of the email address first. Sensitive breaches are also searchable by domain owners who prove they control the domain using the domain search feature. Read about why non-sensitive breaches are publicly searchable.


When you search for a domain

Domain searches allow the exposure of all email addresses on that domain to be returned in a single search. Only someone who controls the domain or the website it's bound to can perform a search via one of the verification processes:

  1. Via email address on the WHOIS record
  2. Via a common security or administrative email address (security@, hostmaster@, postmaster@, webmaster@)
  3. Via a meta tag with a unique code placed on the website
  4. Via a file with a unique code uploaded to the website
  5. Via a txt entry on the DNS record with a unique code

A domain search logs the domain name and requestor's IP address as part of anti-abuse measures. If you ask HIBP to notify you of future appearance of email addresses on that domain and you provide your email address so it can be notified, that email address is also stored. Anti-automation measures are in place to limit attempts to automate searches.


When you search Pwned Passwords

The Pwned Passwords feature searches previous data breaches for the presence of a user-provided password. The password is hashed client-side with the SHA-1 algorithm then only the first 5 characters of the hash are sent to HIBP per the Cloudflare k-anonymity implementation. HIBP never receives the original password nor enough information to discover what the original password was.


When you subscribe for notifications

Your email address is stored in HIBP. It's then referred to when new data is loaded in order to establish if the address appears in a new breach. Anti-automation measures are in place to limit attempts to subscribe email addresses in bulk.


How HIBP handles user-provided data

The only data HIBP ever explicitly requests from users is email addresses and domain names. When someone subscribes to notifications or searches a domain, that information is never passed to any third parties under any circumstances other than to send email using the SendGrid service.


Unsubscribing from breach notifications

Every breach notification email contains an unsubscribe link in the footer. If you'd like to unsubscribe without already having a breach notification email with the link, use the notification service to send another email to yourself and that will contain the unsubscribe link.


How the opt-out feature works

HIBP provides an opt-out feature that removes the email address from public visibility. It does this by flagging the record as being opted-out rather than permanently deleting it to ensure that if the email address appears in subsequent data breaches, it doesn't become publicly searchable again.


When HIBP will contact you

Emails are only ever sent to individuals who double opt-in to receive notifications. The double opt-in involves entering an email address on the notification page or domain search page then successfully proving control of the email address by receiving an email to it. The email contains a unique link which must be followed to confirm opt-in.


Logging

Only the bare minimum logs required to keep the service operational and combat malicious activity are stored. This includes transient web server logs,Google Analytics to assess usage patterns and Application Insights for performance metrics. These logs may include information entered into a form by the user, browser headers such as the user agent string and in some cases, the user's IP address.


How HIBP protects data

Security on HIBP is handled by a "defence in depth" approach, that is the service employs many different layers of security including (but not limited to):

  1. All data transmitted over the internet is done over HTTPS
  2. Cloudflare is used extensively to block potentially malicious requests
  3. Rate limits on APIs are implemented at both the code level and via Cloudflare
  4. Regular security scans are performed to identify code or configuration vulnerabilities
  5. Firewalls are employed to limit access to services running on Microsoft Azure
  6. Disclosure of any security vulnerabilities are encouraged via the security.txt file
  7. Third party components are kept well-maintained (see OWASP's Using Components with Known Vulnerabilities)
  8. External client side dependencies are embedded using subresource integrity hashes

Controlling entity and hosting

HIBP is owned and operated by Superlative Enterprises Pty Ltd, an Australian proprietary limited company (ABN 62 085 442 020) based in the state of Queensland. All services are hosted in the West US Microsoft Azure data centre.