A hacker has posted what they claim is more than 360,000 sets of records stolen from the Australian catering firm, Hampr.
The data was posted to a popular hacking forum on 31 May and has been published free of charge.
The records come in two parts. The first contains customer IDs, names, mobile phone numbers, and account details, while the second part contains dietary information, payment details, billing information, and workspace details.
Hampr has not responded to Cyber Daily’s request for comment.
Who is the hacker?
The hacker, who goes by the online name 2019, appears to be the same threat actor who recently targeted the Melbourne International Film Festival.
A few days before sharing the alleged Hampr data, 2019 offered a trove of customer records allegedly stolen from the festival. MIFF confirmed it was responding to a third-party breach over the weekend.
“Melbourne International Film Festival (MIFF) recently identified unauthorised access to customer information held within the Ferve ticketing platform, a third-party system used by MIFF to manage ticketing and customer information,” a MIFF spokesperson said of the incident.
“Our investigation indicates that certain customer personal information may have been accessed, including names, email addresses, phone numbers and residential addresses. Ferve does not store complete credit card information. As a result, complete payment card details could not have been accessed through the affected platform. There is also no evidence that MIFF account passwords were compromised.”
The threat actor, 2019, has been active on the hacker forum since at least February 2026 and has shared the data of 20 victims across 20 leak posts. Australia is one of their most targeted countries, followed by Spain, the UAE, and the USA.
Who is Hampr?
Headquartered in Sydney, Hampr has offices around the country and provides corporate catering services, including providing ready-made meals, pantry stocking, and event catering.
Customers get access to a “360-degree dashboard” that offers visibility into “purchases, quotes and deliveries”, along with order tracking, event calendars, and more.
The company’s customers include Nespresso, CBRE, and Cisco.
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David Hollingworth
David Hollingworth has been writing about technology for over 20 years, and has worked for a range of print and online titles in his career. He is enjoying getting to grips with cyber security, especially when it lets him talk about Lego.