In total, 828 Pix keys related to the incident were identified. Reproduction/TV Gazeta (Illustrative image) The Civil Police of Maranhão (PC-MA) reported that it identified an incident involving improper consultations of registration data linked to Pix keys through a system used in an institutional environment. According to the corporation, preliminary investigations pointed to the irregular use of access credentials, which allowed unauthorized queries to be carried out in the system. 📲 Click here and subscribe to the g1 Maranhão channel on WhatsApp In total, 828 Pix keys related to the incident were identified. The information accessed includes registration data such as the holder's name, CPF, banking institution and key creation date. The Civil Police clarified that there was no access to passwords, balances, statements, financial transactions or any other information that allows banking operations. According to the institution, the data accessed does not enable transfers, payments or financial transactions. Those interested in checking whether they were affected by the incident can consult information through the system provided by the Civil Police: https://consultachavepix.policiacivil.ma.gov.br/. Now on g1 Also according to PC-MA, so far no accounts linked to the Government of Maranhão have been identified among the records related to the incident. After identifying the case, the corporation reported that it adopted containment and security measures, including reviewing access, technical analysis of system records, preservation of evidence and communication to the competent bodies, including the Central Bank of Brazil. The Civil Police also established administrative and investigative procedures to investigate the case, identify those responsible and reinforce information security and access control protocols. The investigations remain ongoing. Even without the risk of financial transactions, the institution advises the population to pay extra attention to suspicious contacts via telephone, messages, applications, emails and links sent by strangers, avoiding sharing passwords, authentication codes or bank details. PC-MA also reinforced that it does not request passwords, transfers, payments, verification codes or registration updates by phone, SMS, WhatsApp, email or links sent via messages.