Hundreds of German politicians, including Chancellor Angela Merkel, have had personal details hacked and published online.
Contacts, private chats and financial details were put out on Twitter which belong to figures from every political party except the far-right AfD.
Data from celebrities and journalists were also leaked.
It is unclear who was behind the hack, which emerged on Twitter last month in the style of an advent calendar.
The true extent of damage caused by the leak is not yet known although Justice Minister Katarina Barley said it was a "serious attack".
"The people behind this want to damage confidence in our democracy and institutions," she said.
Germany's federal office for information security (BSI) said it was investigating the hack and said government networks were not affected, as far as it was aware. The national cyber-defence centre convened a meeting on Friday morning.
A government spokeswoman said no sensitive data from the chancellor's office had been published.
Although nothing politically explosive is known to have been leaked, the sheer volume of personal data involved suggests the consequences could be considerable, says RBB reporter Michael Götschenberg, who researched the hack.
Many of those targeted are MPs in Germany's Bundestag
The now-suspended Twitter account, followed by 17,000 people, appeared to be linked to an internet platform based in Hamburg, he said. Although documents had been posted on the account last month, it was not until Thursday evening that officials became aware of the hack.
Bild newspaper said all the data stolen in the attack dated back to before October 2018 but it was not clear when it began.
One cyber analyst said there was speculation that hackers may have exploited weaknesses in email software to get hold of passwords that those targeted had also used on social media accounts.
National and local political figures as well as some TV personalities have had their details hacked. Among those hit were:
Immediate suspicion fell on right-wing groups in Germany as well as Russia.
German cyber-security analyst Sven Herpig said Russia was a suspect, first because of the method used but also because Germany was facing four state elections in 2019 as well as elections to the European Parliament.
However, the fact that no right-wing politicians were targeted while prominent figures who had criticised them were spared indicated domestic right-wingers may also have been responsible, he told the BBC.
Russia has been accused of cyber-attacks in Germany before.
In 2015, data was stolen from computers in the Bundestag. And last year the government's IT network came under attack amid reports that Russian hackers were also to blame.
UK-based expert Graham Cluley said the breadth of the latest hack suggested it was a co-ordinated effort involving a determined group over many months.
"This hack clearly isn't about extortion or financially motivated. This is about attempting to destabilise Germany society," he told the BBC.