Thursday 5 December 2013

Why You Should Not Use Lazy Passwords: 2 Million Facebook, Yahoo, & Google Passwords Stolen & Posted Online

More than 2 million passwords for sites including Facebook, Yahoo, LinkedIn, Twitter and Google have been stolen and posted online, BCC reports. Security told experts that a criminal gang may be behind the security breach. The stolen passwords are used to get peoples personal information which can be sold. The stolen passwords are, in general, weak ones. The most popular password that was stolen is "123456," followed by "123456789," "1234" and "password."

It is essential to make your password strong. It is hard to figure out strong passwords. It's a good thing websites indicate the strength of the password as you type it in. I recommend an ideal password should have at least 1 capital letter, 1 number, and 1 symbol (e.g !). using names, birthdays and other information like that is not advisable. 


Huffington Post report;

Security firm Trustwave has discovered the trove of login credentials, email credentials and passwords, it announced on Tuesday.


“Facebook takes people’s information security extremely seriously and we work hard to protect it," a Facebook spokesperson told The Huffington Post. "While details of this case are not yet clear, it appears that people’s computers may have been attacked by hackers using malware to scrape information directly from their web browsers."

The spokesperson also emphasized that all of the compromised passwords have been put into Facebook's password reset process, and that Facebook users can protect their accounts by activating Login Approvals and Login Notifications in their security settings.

"We immediately reset the passwords of the affected accounts," a spokesperson from Twitter told HuffPost. A Google spokesperson pointed us to a blog post about the ways in which the company combats "account hijackers."

The passwords and credentials were taken from people all over the world, Trustwave finds, and the site where the information was posted is written in Russian.


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