So, more stuff from that Discord hack is popping up, and it’s pretty wild. Apparently, Discord had an internal list of accounts their staff were told to *avoid* interacting with. It’s like they knew certain users were trouble and told everyone to just leave them alone – which is kinda concerning, honestly.
So, I stumbled across this internal Discord document – basically a “do not engage” list. It named a bunch of people and groups, like Dr Disrespect, Quackity, KEEMSTAR, TeamSpeak, Streamlabs, the USA Army Esports team, and this journalist named Slasher. Apparently, if anyone tagged any of *them* in a support ticket, Discord staff were told to just close the ticket immediately – no helping, no response, nothing. It’s pretty wild to see who they were avoiding!
I couldn’t believe what I saw online! Someone named Breslau posted a leaked image, and it showed an internal list from the recent Discord hack. Apparently, it was a list of accounts they weren’t supposed to engage with, and it included me, the US Army, and Keemstar! It’s wild to think Slasher and Keemstar were both on a ‘do not interact with’ list – I never expected to see that!
Recent leaks from the Discord hack revealed an internal list of accounts Discord didn’t want to engage with, and it included me, the US Army, and Keem. It’s surprising to see both Slasher and Keemstar being restricted like this.
— Rod Breslau (@Slasher) October 15, 2025
Discord breach takes 70,000 age verification photos
Discord announced on October 8th that a data breach affected approximately 70,000 users’ age verification images. These images were stolen through a security issue with one of their customer service partners and are now being used in an attempt to blackmail people.
Okay, so Discord just put out a statement about that recent security thing, and thankfully it wasn’t a direct hack of Discord itself. It looks like a service *they* use for customer support was the problem. They’ve checked things out and think around 70,000 of us might have had our government-issued ID photos exposed, which is still pretty scary, but at least it wasn’t Discord’s systems that were compromised directly.
The company has notified customers whose information may have been affected, stopped using the vendor responsible for the security issue, and is cooperating with police and cybersecurity professionals to resolve the situation.
This isn’t the first instance of a list like this becoming public following a data breach. In 2021, a similar “do not ban” list was exposed during the large Twitch leak, and it included some of the platform’s most popular streamers.
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2025-10-15 22:18