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Ultrahuman says recent security breach didn’t affect passwords or credit cards

Ultrahuman’s user database was recently hacked, and the smart ring company says there was “no evidence of misuse.”

On March 27, Ultrahuman experienced a security breach that allowed malicious actors to access internal databases. The company recently sent an email alerting users of the breach. The hacked system was reportedly an internal analytics system, and no credit card, payment information, or passwords were leaked during the breach, according to Ultrahuman.

I’m Mohit, founder & CEO of Ultrahuman. On 27 March 2026, we had a security incident, but the most important facts first: no passwords, card details, or payment data were involved, and we have found no evidence of misuse. Here is the full account what occurred, the information involved, and the steps we have taken in response.

What was leaked was account details, contact information, and transaction history. Those records were void of the cards used to pay for orders, or any other more sensitive information. You might think of it as losing a mailing receipt on the ground, only for someone to find your recent order.

Ultrhuman has not specified how long it took to identify the data breach, but it notes that action was taken immediately to revoke access and take it offline. Security vulnerabilities have also been addressed, says Ultrahuman. It noted heightened control policies and endpoint security on employee devices.

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These attempts are generally successful at collecting contact information that can then be sold to data collection agencies. The email that was sent out warns users to be aware of phishing attempts, noting that the advice is a given in any case.

The company recently announced the Ring Pro to compete against Oura, RingConn, and Samsung. This comes as Oura also announced a new product recently – the Oura Ring 5 – while rumors begin to build around Samsung’s Galaxy Ring 2.

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