HackedAlert: Approximately 2 Million Cybersecurity Breaches in Chile
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The Evolution of Threat Hunting
The current cybersecurity ecosystem in Chile demands a radical transition from passive monitoring to an active, predictive intelligence posture. HackedAlert is not limited to indexing assets; it represents a highly complex technological hub designed to mitigate the information asymmetry affecting both private enterprises and government bodies.
In an environment where threats evolve exponentially, our platform acts as a resilience catalyst, transforming scattered data into concrete action vectors for preventing cybersecurity attacks, data leaks, and all other types of incidents.
The disparity between global digital asset search engines—such as Shodan, Censys, ZoomEye, or FOFA—and the reality of Chilean infrastructure is abysmal. These tools, lacking a specialized focus, generate excessive noise that hinders strategic decision-making.
In contrast, HackedAlert has been designed to execute "deep indexing" on national assets, applying enrichment layers that categorize vulnerabilities under the MITRE CVE standard. This process removes friction in cybersecurity governance, allowing engineering and information security teams to execute remediation plans based on verifiable technical evidence, rather than assumptions.
The Regulatory Context and the Governance Challenge in Chile
Chile is currently facing a compliance limbo that puts the stability of the Chilean cyberspace at risk. More than a year after the enactment of Law No. 21.663, the absence of oversight milestones by the National Cybersecurity Agency (ANCI) is not only concerning but reflects a systemic deficiency in applying the current regulatory framework. This governmental inaction—characterized by a display of media grandstanding without operational counterparts—has left a void that the private sector and public organizations must fill through proactive self-regulation.
HackedAlert serves as a strategic alternative for technical and commercial spheres. In a scenario where institutions do not guarantee the necessary security standards, our platform empowers decision-makers to identify their own vulnerabilities before malicious third parties do.
The lack of transparency in the execution of Law No. 21.663 has facilitated the proliferation of market actors who have ignored the technical complexity of cybersecurity. At HackedAlert, we reject that narrative, offering instead absolute visibility into the Chilean attack surface, forcing infrastructure managers to face their operational reality without excuses.
Data Processing Methodology
Our data architecture is based on processing more than 10 million records of Chilean digital assets, with plans to expand analysis to the following countries:
- Argentina, Peru, and Bolivia
Unlike statistical models based on data sampling, our approach is massive and exhaustive, analyzing approximately 50% of the domains registered with NIC Chile.
The technical scope of our exploration includes precise segmentation of top-level domains and critical subdomains of the Chilean cyberspace, specifically:
- .cl (National primary domain)
- gob.cl (Governmental structure)
- gov.cl (State entities)
- mil.cl (Defense infrastructure)
- IP Addresses (ranges assigned by LACNIC)
- Subdomains of .cl, gob.cl, gov.cl, and mil.cl
Results: Massive Vulnerability Audit
The magnitude of digital risk in Chile is quantifiable and urgent. We have identified a total of 1,736,852 vulnerabilities categorized under the MITRE CVE framework. This number is not just a statistic; it represents millions of potential entry points that, if exploited, could compromise the integrity, confidentiality, and availability of cyberspace in Chile.
Top 20: Prevalence of Vulnerabilities in Chile
| CVE Identifier | Incident Record |
|---|---|
| CVE-2023-44487 | 28,914 |
| CVE-2009-4487 | 28,873 |
| CVE-2013-0337 | 28,873 |
| CVE-2026-40460 | 28,873 |
| CVE-2026-40701 | 28,873 |
| CVE-2026-42926 | 28,873 |
| CVE-2026-42934 | 28,873 |
| CVE-2026-42945 | 28,873 |
| CVE-2026-42946 | 28,873 |
| CVE-2026-28755 | 27,986 |
| CVE-2025-14179 | 10,582 |
| CVE-2026-6722 | 10,582 |
| CVE-2026-6735 | 10,582 |
| CVE-2026-7259 | 10,582 |
| CVE-2026-7261 | 10,582 |
| CVE-2026-7262 | 10,582 |
| CVE-2026-7568 | 10,582 |
| CVE-2026-27651 | 8,701 |
| CVE-2026-27654 | 8,701 |
Conclusion: The Strategic Imperative
The diagnosis is clear: Chile's digital infrastructure exhibits vulnerability levels that far exceed what poor security management can tolerate. HackedAlert provides the necessary visibility for CTOs and security leads to transform risk into a manageable variable in the short term.
The information presented in this partial report is not optional.
Official Report with All Statistics
If you want the official report with all statistical data, you must request it on the official website of Ley Marco de Ciberseguridad: https://leymarcodeciberseguridad.cl.
10 Million Digital Assets, 2 Million Vulnerabilities
If you want to navigate 10 million digital assets of Chile, and find close to 2 million CVE codes, sign up at https://hackedalert.com/results/ or at http://hackedalert.com/signup/ to get a free web search account for a limited time.