Caught on Camera: 21 Million Work Screens Leaked Online - Could Yours Be Next?
21 million work screens have leaked online, exposing sensitive business data. Discover why it matters, who’s most at risk, and how you can secure your company before becoming the next headline.

Imagine you’re working on a confidential client project, your inbox is open, your password manager is on screen — and somewhere out there, a stranger is watching your every click.
Sound like a scene from Snowden? It’s not.
Welcome to the real-life nightmare of 2025, where workplace surveillance doesn’t just end with your boss — it might include the entire internet.
The Leak Heard ‘Round the Cubicle
Researchers at Cybernews have dropped a bombshell: a workplace monitoring app called WorkComposer exposed more than 21 million real-time screenshots on the open web via an unsecured Amazon S3 bucket.
Yes, 21 million.
This wasn’t just metadata or vague activity logs. We’re talking full-screen, high-resolution peeks into what employees are doing — emails, chats, passwords, client files, API keys, financials — all viewable with nothing but a browser.
“It’s like giving a hacker front-row seats to your business operations,” said a Cybernews researcher.
WorkComposer, used by over 200,000 employees worldwide, has since locked down the data — but not before it was wide open for who-knows-how-long.
Screenshots Today, Lawsuits Tomorrow?
The implications go far beyond embarrassment:
- Login credentials in view? That’s a gateway to full-on breaches.
- GDPR and CCPA violations? Almost guaranteed.
- Client trust? Shattered.
According to IBM’s Cost of a Data Breach 2023 report, the average cost of a breach has risen to $4.45 million, with compromised credentials accounting for 19% of initial access vectors.
And yes — screenshots count.
Surveillance or Security Hazard?
Apps like WorkComposer and WebWork (another monitoring app that previously leaked 13 million screenshots) claim they’re about “accountability.” In practice, they’re often just digital Big Brother.
And when security lapses like this occur, employees aren’t just monitored — they’re exposed.
A recent Cisco Data Privacy Benchmark Study found that 92% of consumers say they won’t do business with companies that fail to protect personal data. That includes employee data, too.
This is not just an IT problem. It’s a boardroom-level crisis waiting to happen.
If You’re an Employer, Ask Yourself:
- Are your employee monitoring tools secure?
- Could your screenshots or keystroke data be floating out in the wild?
- Have you checked your third-party vendors’ privacy practices?
If the answer is “I don’t know,” you need to act fast — before your business becomes front-page news for all the wrong reasons.
Managed Nerds Can Help
If you’re an employer using productivity trackers — or suspect you’ve been hacked — it’s time to get professional help. Managed Nerds specializes in securing workplace systems, identifying data exposures, and putting compliance safeguards in place.
Don’t let your company become the next headline.
Visit Managed Nerds to secure your workplace before your digital life goes public.
Read the Cybernews article here