NVIDIA GeForce NOW Data Breach Exposes User Information
A data breach involving NVIDIA’s authorized GeForce NOW service provider GFN.AM has exposed sensitive user information after attackers gained unauthorized access to its backend database. The breach reportedly remained undetected for nearly two months, potentially affecting users registered before March 9, 2026. Exposed data may include email addresses, phone numbers, dates of birth, usernames, and full names linked through Google Sign-In accounts.


Although passwords were not compromised, cybersecurity experts warn that the leaked personal information could still be used for phishing attacks, SIM swapping, identity fraud, and social engineering campaigns. Attackers often combine exposed contact details with fake support messages or login alerts to trick users into revealing additional credentials or financial information. Users are strongly advised to monitor their accounts for suspicious activity and enable multi-factor authentication wherever possible.
The incident highlights the growing cybersecurity risks surrounding cloud gaming and online service platforms. Organizations handling user data must strengthen database security, access controls, and threat monitoring to reduce exposure to breaches. NPAV Fraud Protector helps defend users against phishing attempts, identity theft, malicious links, and fraudulent communications that commonly follow major data leaks and account exposure incidents.
NPAV Fraud Protector helps defend against phishing attacks, identity theft, malicious links, fake communications, and fraud attempts that often follow major data breaches and personal data leaks.