The FBI and Dutch police take down the stolen identity marketplace Genesis with operation Cookie Monster. Genesis was an initial access broker with over 80 million compromised accounts available for sale.
From the Department of Justice:
Genesis Market was user-friendly, providing users with the ability to search for stolen access credentials based on location and/or account type (e.g., banking, social media, email, etc.). In addition to access credentials, they obtained and sold device fingerprints, which are unique combinations of device identifiers and browser cookies that circumvent anti-fraud detection systems used by many websites.
The combination of stolen access credentials, fingerprints, and cookies allowed purchasers to assume the identity of the victim by tricking third party websites into thinking the Genesis Market user was the actual owner of the account.
Here's a screenshot of the console before the takedown:
Victim credentials obtained from the investigation have been provided to the website “Have I Been Pwned, a free resource for people to assess whether their access credentials have been compromised in a data breach or other activity. You can visit HaveIBeenPwned [.] com to see whether your credentials were compromised by Genesis.
Suggested actions if you were compromised.
OR
Here's the Genesis site after the FBI makeover. Extra credit to those that can find evidence of the FBI's sense of humor.
Sources: The Department of Justice, troyhunt.com