Yahoo Breach News Just Gets Worse

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Publicated : 22/11/2024   Category : security


Yahoo Breach News Just Gets Worse


It turns out that more than 3 billion accounts were compromised in the Yahoo breach originally disclosed last year.



Its not a new breach, but new information on an old cyber disaster. Remember the Yahoo breach -- the one in which they said roughly a billion user credentials were compromised? It turns out the companys count was off -- to the tune of 2 billion users.
Thats right,
according to Yahoo
(which is now part of Verizon), every single one of their user accounts were compromised. Thats roughly 3 billion users who have had their credentials exposed to hackers. The accounts hit by the breach include those on Yahoo email, Tumblr, Fantasy and Flickr.
In the statement announcing the additional impact, Oath (the name for the company that now includes both Verizon and Yahoo) said, in part, ...the company recently obtained new intelligence and now believes, following an investigation with the assistance of outside forensic experts, that all Yahoo user accounts were affected by the August 2013 theft. Thats the bad news for Yahoo customers and users.
The good news came a few lines down in the statement, where the company noted, The investigation indicates that the user account information that was stolen did not include passwords in clear text, payment card data, or bank account information. Of course, not everyone is convinced that consumers dont need to worry.
In a written statement commenting on the news, Ilia Kolochenko, CEO of web security company High-Tech Bridge, said, Taking into consideration that the integrity of Yahoo user accounts was compromised, one can reasonably infer that Yahoo ignored the fundamental principles of access segregation, continuous security monitoring and related security processes. Therefore, its a bit hard to believe that sensitive information related to these accounts remained safe. Moreover, even hashed passwords can be bruteforced and then leveraged by the attackers. Information like date of birth or answer to secret question(s) can be a universal door-opener for cyber criminals.
Concern over the ultimate safety of consumer private information is widespread. In a statement supplied to Security Now, Rich Campagna, CEO of Bitglass said, Back when the breach was first disclosed, we noted that many large enterprises lack the necessary controls to limit unauthorized access. While this remains the case, a breach where virtually all Yahoo users are affected is unprecedented.
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With no banking information or clear-text passwords in the data store, some might ask what value the account information might have for hackers. One answer is legitimate email addresses for phishing attempts. In a written statement commenting on the Yahoo news, Lisa Baergen, director at NuData Security said, Phishing -- one of the oldest tricks in the fraudster’s playbook -– still works. In fact, with social data and compromised credentials, it works remarkably well. If your policies and training practices arent up to par, youre only inviting needless risk. Many phishing campaigns are so personalized that they have a successful open rate as high as 30%. So its not a question of if, but when.
While it can be argued that Yahoo received economic sanctions in the form of dramatically lowered valuation during the sale to Verizon, questions still remain about how a breach of this magnitude could have happened when any real security infrastructure was in place. As Campagna said, It’s difficult to imagine any circumstance in which an organization committed to security could have all network segmentation, policies, and security measures bypassed completely. Even over a prolonged period of time, it is exceedingly difficult to exfiltrate 3 billion records without setting off a single actionable alarm.
He continued, When the deal between Verizon and Yahoo was initially announced, we saw the direct impact that the breach had on the price of the acquisition. This goes to show that a seemingly small gap in security can be devastating and have prolonged implications for any business.
Related posts:
Deloitte Hack Still Has More Questions Than Answers
Right & Wrong Lessons From the Equifax Breach
Equifax Breach Wont Be the Last or Worst
— Curtis Franklin is the editor of
SecurityNow.com
. Follow him on Twitter
@kg4gwa
.

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Yahoo Breach News Just Gets Worse