Your info is for sale. Right now. On the dark web.
Hackers breached Beckett and are selling the company's entire customer database. Names. Emails. Phone numbers. Home addresses. All of it.
Oh, and they defaced the website too. Just to prove they could.
Beckett's Response? Radio Silence.
Zero communication. No email blast. No website notice. Nothing.

International Cyber Digest got their hands on what appears to be the complete list of North American emails in the breach. How? A pissed-off customer leaked it to them because Beckett won't say a word.
That's not how this works. When you get hacked, you tell people. Immediately. But Beckett is playing hide-and-seek with a data breach.
The Real Problem
Beckett got caught with their pants down and decided the best move was... pretend it didn't happen?
Customers had to leak the breach themselves just to warn other collectors.
That's not a company you trust with your personal information. That's not even a company trying to do the right thing.
Got hacked. Went quiet. End of story.



