A password-less database containing an estimated 1.3 million sets of Dutch COVID-19 testing records was left exposed to the open internet, and it's not clear if anyone is taking responsibility.…
Among the information revealed in the publicly accessible and seemingly insecurely configured database were 118,441 coronavirus test certificates, 506,663 appointment records, 660,173 testing samples and "a small number" of internal files.
A bevy of personally identifiable information was included in the records – including patient names, dates of birth, passport numbers, email addresses, and other information.
The leaky database was discovered by perennial breach sniffer Jeremiah Fowler, who reckoned it belongs to one of the Netherlands' largest commercial COVID-19 test providers, CoronaLab
https://nltimes.nl/2020/10/02/dutch-businesses-increasingly-turning-commercial-covid-tests
a subsidiary of Amsterdam-based Microbe & Lab.
"The database remained open for nearly three weeks before I contacted the cloud hosting provider and it was finally secured from public access."
https://www.theregister.com/2024/01/24/dutch_covid_testing_firm_ignored_warnings