16/05/2026
The recent Canvas LMS breach should concern every EdTech leader and institution CTO right now.
Here's the big question:
Is your LMS a shared SaaS liability or a system you actually control?
What happened:
In early May 2026, ShinyHunters exploited Instructure's Free-For-Teacher account program, which ran on the same shared infrastructure as every paid institutional account. They walked out with 3.65 terabytes of data from 8,809 institutions across 50 countries.
The numbers:
• ~275 million users affected
• Ivy League universities, K-12 districts, and institutions across 6+ countries in the leaked data
• Private student-teacher messages, enrollment records, email addresses, and student IDs exposed
What makes this different: Canvas stores medical accommodation requests, personal advisor conversations, sensitive disclosures students share in confidence.
This isn't just a PII leak. It's a violation of trust at an institutional level.
This breach was only possible because of shared multi-tenant cloud infrastructure. Every affected institution was on Instructure's hosted environment.
Where as Self-hosted Canvas deployments have no shared backend to Instructure's cloud while self-hosted version of Canvas LMS were not just less at risk. They were entirely out of scope.
At eLearning evolve, we help universities and ed-tech teams deploy Canvas LMS on their own server for full control over privacy and security of the LMS.
https://lnkd.in/dSAEt6XX
19/03/2026
24/12/2024
03/11/2024
05/09/2024
15/08/2024
08/07/2024