The leak effectively acted as an unregulated, public phone and address directory. Public figures, politicians, journalists, and private citizens alike had their home addresses and family relationships entirely exposed to the public. 3. Social Engineering and Scams
The original data leak occurred over a decade ago when Albania’s national electronic registry was compromised or inappropriately distributed. The database contains unencrypted, highly sensitive details of nearly the entire Albanian population alive at that time. The dataset generally includes structural fields such as: Full names (First, Last, and Paternal/Maternal names) National ID numbers Dates and places of birth Precise residential addresses Family ties and voting centers gjendja civile 2008 repack
For legitimate needs, such as verifying identity or applying for documents, citizens should use the official Albanian Government Portal (e-Albania) or visit a local civil status office to obtain a PIN code for the Regjistri i Gjendjes Civile Shqiperi. The leak effectively acted as an unregulated, public
Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes, describing a known dataset, and does not condone the unauthorized use or distribution of personal data. Social Engineering and Scams The original data leak
as it existed in 2008. The data was originally part of a major public leak and has since been optimized (repacked) for easier querying, smaller storage footprint, and compatibility with modern database management systems (DBMS). Technical Specifications Original Source: National Civil Registry of Albania (2008). Typically distributed as , or specialized database files (SQLite/MySQL). Record Count: Approximately 3.2 to 3.5 million entries
: The raw SQL dumps or text files from the original leak were buggy and prone to crashing standard consumer hardware. "Repacks" fix these database structural errors, making them accessible to run on basic laptops.
Users should exercise extreme caution when searching for or downloading these repacks: