1. Welcome Guest! In order to create a new topic or reply to an existing one, you must register first. It is easy and free. Click here to sign up now!.
    Dismiss Notice

Yahoo: All Our 3 Billion Users Were Hacked

Discussion in 'General Malware And Security' started by starbuck, Oct 4, 2017.

  1. starbuck

    starbuck Administrator - Malware Removal Specialist Administrator

    Joined:
    Sep 26, 2009
    Messages:
    3,825
    Location:
    Midlands, UK
    Operating System:
    Windows 10
    CPU:
    AMD Athlon II x2 250 Processor 3.00GHz
    Memory:
    8gb DDR3
    Hard Drive:
    500gb SATA
    Graphics Card:
    ASUS GeForce GTX 960 2gb
    Power Supply:
    650w PowerCool X-Viper
    Company admits that more users were actually hacked in 2013

    a1af794f706428e73ac18065e08cb77c.jpg

    The Yahoo hack saga continues, this time with more information provided by the company itself, who reckoned in a statement that more users were actually hacked in 2013 than it previously revealed.

    Yahoo said in September 2016 that 500 million accounts got hacked in 2013 as part of what it described as a state-sponsored attack, albeit absolutely no specifics on the hacking group or the country behind the breach were provided.

    Yahoo, however, released an updated statement in December to bump the figure to 1 billion, saying that it discovered evidence that twice as many accounts were hacked than it initially thought.

    3 billion accounts compromised

    And now the company returns with another statement, revealing that its original investigation actually pointed to a wrong number.
    So the hack didn’t affect 500 million or 1 billion accounts, but 3 billion records, which represented the entire userbase of Yahoo at that time.
    This means that all Yahoo users in 2013 were exposed following the breach.

    Based on an analysis of the information with the assistance of outside forensic experts, Yahoo has determined that all accounts that existed at the time of the August 2013 theft were likely affected,” Yahoo said in the latest statement.

    It is important to note that, in connection with Yahoo's December 2016 announcement of the August 2013 theft, Yahoo took action to protect all accounts.
    The company required all users who had not changed their passwords since the time of the theft to do so
    .”

    The only good thing here is that the breach didn’t expose information like bank accounts, credit card data, or passwords, with hackers managing to compromise accounts using stolen Yahoo source code.

    If there still are any Yahoo users out there, it goes without saying that they must change their passwords as soon as possible, even though it’s pretty clear that this is an advice coming way too late given the hack happened in 2013.
    Judging from its statement, Yahoo believes that it reacted well by “taking action to protect accounts” and confirming the breach 3 years after it happened.


    Source:
    http://news.softpedia.com/news/yahoo-all-our-3-billion-users-got-hacked-517899.shtml
     
  2. allheart55 (Cindy E)

    allheart55 (Cindy E) Administrator Administrator

    Joined:
    Jun 11, 2009
    Messages:
    10,424
    Location:
    Pennsylvania
    Operating System:
    Windows 10
    Computer Brand or Motherboard:
    ASUS M4A77TD AM3 AMD 770 ATX AMD
    CPU:
    AMD Phenom II X6 1090T-Thuban 3.2GHz
    Memory:
    Crucial-DDR3 SDRAM 1333-8GB
    Hard Drive:
    WD Caviar Black SE HDD 640 GB - WD Caviar Black SE HDD 500 GB
    Graphics Card:
    Sapphire Radeon HD-7870 2GB
    Power Supply:
    CORSAIR CMPSU-750W
    Yeah, I was hacked in 2013, even though they told me it wasn't part of the data breach.
    They admitted to me today that my account had been compromised as part of the huge hack.
     

Share This Page