bleepingcomputer.com By Bill Toulas
September 8, 2025
American furniture brand Lovesac is warning that it suffered a data breach impacting an undisclosed number of individuals, stating their personal data was exposed in a cybersecurity incident.
Lovesac is a furniture designer, manufacturer, and retailer, operating 267 showrooms across the United States, and having annual net sales of $750 million.
They are best known for their modular couch systems called 'sactionals,' as well as their bean bags called 'sacs.'
According to the notices sent to impacted individuals, between February 12, 2025, and March 3, 2025, hackers gained unauthorized access to the company's internal systems and stole data hosted on those systems.
Lovesac discovered the breach on February 28, 2025, which means it took them three days to fully remediate the situation and block the threat actor's access to its network.
The data that has been stolen includes full names and other personal information that hasn't been disclosed in the notice sample shared with the Attorney General's offices.
The company has not clarified whether the incident impacts customers, employees, or contractors, and neither has it disclosed the exact number of individuals affected.
Enclosed in the notification letter, recipients will find instructions on enrolling in 24 24-month credit monitoring service through Experian, redeemable until November 28, 2025.
The company noted that it currently has no indication that the stolen information has been misused, but urges impacted individuals to remain vigilant against phishing attempts.
Ransomware gang claimed attack on Lovesac
Although Lovesac does not name the attackers and didn't mention data encryption in the letters, the RansomHub ransomware gang claimed an attack on March 3, 2025.
The threat actors added Lovesac onto their extortion portal, announcing the breach, indicating plans to leak the stolen data if a ransom payment isn't made. We were unable to determine if they followed up with this threat.
The RansomHub ransomware-as-a-service (RaaS) operation emerged in February 2024 and has since amassed a roster of high-profile victims, including staffing firm Manpower, oilfield services giant Halliburton, the Rite Aid pharmacy chain, Kawasaki's European division, the Christie's auction house, U.S. telecom provider Frontier Communications, the Planned Parenthood healthcare nonprofit, and Italy's Bologna Football Club.
The ransomware operation quietly shut down in April 2025, with many of their affiliates moving to DragonForce.
BleepingComputer has contacted Lovesac to learn more about the incident, its impact, and how many customers were impacted, and will update this post if we receive a response.
Bitcoin Depot, an operator of Bitcoin ATMs, is notifying customers of a data breach incident that has exposed their sensitive information.
In the letter sent to affected individuals, the company informs that it first detected suspicious activity on its network last year on June 23.
Although the internal investigation was completed on July 18, 2024, a parallel investigation by federal agencies dictated that public disclosure of the incident should be withheld until it was completed.
“On July 18, 2024, the investigation was complete, and we identified your personal information contained within documents related to certain of our customers that the unauthorized individual obtained,” explains Bitcoin Depot in the letter.
“Unfortunately, we were not able to inform you sooner due to an ongoing investigation. Federal law enforcement requested that Bitcoin Depot wait to provide you notice until after they completed the investigation.”
The type of data that has been exposed in this incident varies from individual to individual and may include:
Full name
Phone number
Driver’s license number
Address
Date of birth
Email address
Bitcoin Depot is one of the largest Bitcoin ATM networks in the United States, operating 8,800 machines in the U.S., Canada, and Australia.