Data Breach Impacts Abu Dhabi Finance Week Delegates
Abu Dhabi Finance Week (ADFW) organizers have confirmed the resolution of a data breach that exposed sensitive personal information belonging to a limited subset of its delegates. The incident, which came to light this week, involved an unprotected cloud storage server managed by a third-party vendor, making scans of identity documents publicly accessible.
The breach reportedly affected more than 700 individuals, whose passports and state identity cards were found online. This occurred despite the broader ADFW event, organized by the Abu Dhabi Global Market (ADGM), hosting over 35,000 attendees.
High-Profile Individuals Among Those Affected
Among the prominent figures whose personal details were exposed were former British Prime Minister Lord David Cameron, hedge fund billionaire Alan Howard, and former White House communications director Anthony Scaramucci. Other notable individuals identified in a sample of the exposed files included Richard Teng, co-chief executive of crypto exchange Binance and former CEO of ADGM, and Lucie Berger, the European Union's ambassador to the UAE.
Discovery and Remediation Efforts
The vulnerability was initially discovered by freelance security researcher Roni Suchowski, who noted that the data, including invoices and other files, had been accessible online for at least two months. The server was secured immediately after the Financial Times contacted ADFW about the exposure on Monday, February 16, 2026.
ADFW issued a statement confirming 'a vulnerability in a third-party vendor-managed storage environment relating to a limited subset of ADFW 2025 attendees.' Organizers emphasized that 'the environment was secured immediately upon identification, and our initial review indicates that access activity was limited to the researcher that identified the issue.' Affected attendees have since been informed of the incident.
Implications for Data Security
Cybersecurity experts have highlighted the significant risks associated with such a breach, including potential for identity theft, targeted phishing campaigns, and unauthorized access to online accounts. The incident underscores the critical importance of robust data protection measures, particularly for high-profile international events that handle sensitive personal information through third-party vendors.
5 Comments
BuggaBoom
Good to see they resolved it quickly once notified. Transparency matters!
Loubianka
It's positive that a security researcher discovered the vulnerability before malicious actors could exploit it more widely, yet the fact that it was publicly accessible for so long indicates a failure in proactive monitoring. They should implement continuous security checks rather than reactive measures.
Katchuka
High-profile individuals affected means this breach is far more serious than they're letting on.
Eugene Alta
It's positive that a security researcher found it and not a malicious actor.
KittyKat
Unacceptable! Passports and IDs exposed for months? This is a massive failure.