If youβre reading this, the odds are pretty good that your kidβs school district, your college, or your local university is on the affected list. About 8,809 institutions worldwide were named in the May 2026 Canvas breach β thatβs roughly 7,400 U.S. schools across all 50 states, plus thousands more internationally. Harvard, Stanford, MIT, the entire Ivy League. LAUSD, Chicago Public Schools, Miami-Dade, Clark County, the entire Hawaii Department of Education. Millions of K-12 students. Literally, not metaphorically.
This is the second large education breach in 18 months. The PowerSchool breach we covered back in early 2025 hit roughly 62 million students and 9.5 million educators. Now Canvas. The pattern is clear and itβs not going away.
So letβs skip the panic and get to what you can actually do.
What Got Stolen (And What Didnβt)
The hackers β a group called ShinyHunters thatβs been responsible for breaches at Ticketmaster, Salesforce, and several Ivy League universities β claim they took 3.65 terabytes of data representing about 275 million records.
Confirmed stolen:
- Names
- School email addresses
- Student ID numbers
- Private messages exchanged inside Canvas (between students, between students and teachers, between students and academic advisors)
Confirmed NOT stolen (according to Instructure, the company that makes Canvas):
- Passwords
- Dates of birth
- Social Security numbers
- Financial information
- Coursework, grades, or assignments
That sounds reassuring. Hereβs the part nobody is saying loudly enough: the private messages are the dangerous part.
Think about what gets typed into Canvas messages:
- A student asking their professor or teacher about a medical accommodation
- A college student emailing their advisor about a mental health crisis or a family emergency
- A K-12 parent messaging a teacher about their childβs behavioral or medical issues
- Students reporting harassment or discrimination through course channels
- Faculty discussing specific students with each other
A stolen password gets changed in 30 seconds. The fact that your daughter disclosed an eating disorder to her academic advisor in February 2024 cannot be un-disclosed. Thatβs the data thatβs now in criminal hands, attached to her real name, her real student ID, and her real school email.
This is what makes the Canvas breach worse than the PowerSchool breach in some ways. PowerSchool leaked Social Security numbers β which is bad, but actionable; you freeze credit and move on. Canvas leaked the content of private conversations, which is something you canβt take back.
Whatβs Actually Going to Happen Next
In our experience covering breaches, hereβs the realistic threat model β what scammers will actually try in the coming weeks and months.
1. Highly Convincing Phishing Emails
This is the big one. The stolen data lets scammers send emails that look exactly like theyβre from your school, your childβs school district, your registrarβs office, your kidβs actual teacher. The emails will reference real course names, real instructor names, real dates. They will look completely legitimate.
The classic phishing playbook doesnβt work anymore. The new playbook is: βHi [Real Name], this is [Real Advisor]. I noticed you missed Tuesdayβs [Real Course Name] lecture. Click here to access the makeup material before Fridayβs quiz.β
That kind of email is going to land in millions of inboxes over the next 90 days.
2. Spoofed District Communications to Parents
For K-12 families specifically, expect emails that look like theyβre from the superintendent, the principal, or the school nurse. They will reference real district names, real school calendars, real upcoming events. The goal is usually one of three things:
- Get you to click a link that installs malware
- Get you to enter login credentials on a fake page
- Get you to βverifyβ payment information for fake fees, fundraisers, or activity costs
3. βSextortionβ and Personal-Data Extortion
Where Canvas messages contained sensitive personal disclosures β and many will have β expect targeted extortion attempts. Scammers will reference real private content from real messages to make threats seem credible. They may demand cryptocurrency payments to βpreventβ data from being released, even though the data is already out.
The FBI has explicitly warned that scammers will piggyback on this breach to extort people who may not even have had data exposed. Many of these threats will be bluffs based on the public list of affected schools, not actual stolen data. Do not pay anyone.
4. Synthetic Identity Fraud (For Minors)
Hereβs the part most people donβt know: children have credit reports. Theyβre usually blank, which makes them perfect for criminals to build fake identities on top of. A stolen student ID number combined with publicly available information β your address, your childβs date of birth from school records that may have leaked elsewhere β can be used to open credit accounts, file fake tax returns, and apply for benefits. The fraud often isnβt discovered until the child turns 18 and tries to open their first bank account.
This is exactly what happened with the PowerSchool breach, and the cleanup process for victimized kids took years.
What to Do This Week β A Real Checklist
For Every Family
1. Treat any school-related email as suspicious for the next 90 days.
If your school emails you about anything urgent β a problem with your kidβs grade, a missed payment, a security warning, a deadline β do not click anything in the email. Open a new browser window, go directly to the schoolβs website by typing the URL yourself, and log in there. If thereβs a real notification, itβll be there.
2. Change passwords anywhere you reused your Canvas password.
If you (or your kid) used the same password for Canvas as you used for email, Amazon, banking, or social media β change all of them now. And use a password manager. Stop reusing passwords.
3. Turn on two-factor authentication everywhere.
Email first. Then banking. Then social media. Then everything else. This single step blocks the overwhelming majority of account takeover attempts. Use an authenticator app (Google Authenticator, Authy, 1Password) rather than SMS where you can β SMS 2FA can be defeated by SIM-swapping.
4. Talk to your kid (if theyβre old enough) about what happened.
Especially teens and college students. Tell them:
- Their schoolβs Canvas data was stolen
- It probably included messages they sent to teachers and advisors
- They should be extremely suspicious of any email or text from βthe schoolβ for the next several months
- If anything weird shows up β a message referencing private things β they should tell you immediately and not pay anyone
For Parents of K-12 Kids (Especially Under 13)
5. Freeze your childβs credit. Right now. All three bureaus.
This is the single most important thing you can do for a minor childβs protection. Yes, kids have credit reports. Yes, you can freeze them. Yes, itβs free. Yes, itβs worth the 30 minutes.
- Equifax: Submit a minor child freeze request or call 1-800-685-1111
- Experian: Add a credit freeze for a minor or call 1-888-397-3742
- TransUnion: Place a security freeze for a minor or call 1-888-909-8872
Youβll need your childβs birth certificate, Social Security card, your own ID, and proof of address. Each bureau handles it slightly differently and a couple require mailing documents. Do all three. A freeze on one bureau doesnβt help if a fraudster checks the other two.
6. Ask your school district one direct question.
In writing. To the superintendentβs office or the principal:
What specific student data fields were stored in our districtβs Canvas instance, and when will we receive formal notification about whether our childβs data was included in the breach? Under FERPA and our stateβs student privacy law, what is the districtβs notification timeline?
If the answer is mushy, vague, or βweβre waiting on Instructure,β escalate it β to the school board, to your state Attorney Generalβs office. Most states have a student privacy office that takes these complaints seriously.
7. If your child is under 13, COPPA applies.
The federal Childrenβs Online Privacy Protection Act has stricter rules for under-13 data, including specific parental notification rights. The updated COPPA rule took effect April 22, 2026 β just before this breach. Your district has obligations that go beyond standard FERPA. The compliance angle is covered in detail at compliancehub.wiki for anyone who wants the full regulatory breakdown.
For College Students and Their Parents
8. Be extra cautious about anything finals-week related.
The breach hit right in the middle of finals. Scammers know this. Expect emails about βgrade disputes,β βtranscript holds,β βtuition payment problems,β βregistration issues,β βscholarship verification.β Anything that creates urgency around your academic standing is a red flag right now.
9. Watch for βyour data is for saleβ extortion.
If anyone contacts you claiming they have your private Canvas messages and demands payment to keep them private, do not pay. Document the message (screenshot it). Report it to the FBIβs Internet Crime Complaint Center at ic3.gov. Then tell your universityβs IT and security office.
10. Check your student loan and financial aid accounts.
Student ID numbers are sometimes used as identifiers in financial aid systems. Log into FAFSA and your loan servicer accounts β using the direct websites, not links in emails β and verify nothing has been changed.
What This Breach Is Really About
EdTech companies β PowerSchool, Illuminate, now Instructure β have been consolidating for years. A handful of vendors now run the platforms that thousands of schools depend on. When one of them gets hit, everyone gets hit at once.
The PowerSchool breach in December 2024 exposed data on roughly 72 million students and educators. The root cause? PowerSchoolβs customer support portal didnβt have multi-factor authentication. A single compromised contractor credential gave the attacker access to data on tens of millions of children.
The Canvas breach is structurally similar β a weak point in a free-account program became the entry point to data on the entire user base. Different vector, same lesson: when the platform underneath your kidβs school has a weakness, your kidβs school has a weakness.
The Bigger Picture for Parents
Schools were not built to be data custodians for millions of childrenβs most sensitive information, and the vendors theyβre forced to use are not built for it either. Until that changes β until procurement officers, school boards, and state legislators treat student data privacy as seriously as student physical safety β these breaches are going to keep happening.
What you can control is your own familyβs exposure. Freeze the credit. Use a password manager. Turn on 2FA. Teach your kids to be skeptical of urgent-sounding school emails. Ask your district hard questions in writing.
The Canvas breach is bad. PowerSchool was bad. The next one will be bad too. Your job is to be the parent who already did the boring protective work before it happened.
Quick Links
- Freeze a minorβs credit: Equifax | Experian | TransUnion
- Report scams or extortion attempts: FBI IC3
- Identity theft recovery: IdentityTheft.gov
- Full breach coverage: breached.company
- Compliance and regulatory details: compliancehub.wiki



