September 22, 2016
Information from at least 500 million Yahoo accounts was stolen from the company in 2014, and the company believes that a state-sponsored actor was behind the hack.
The information may have included names, email addresses, telephone numbers, dates of birth and, in some cases, encrypted or unencrypted security questions and answers, Yahoo said.
September 22, 2016
Information from at least 500 million Yahoo accounts was stolen from the company in 2014, and the company believes that a state-sponsored actor was behind the hack.
The information may have included names, email addresses, telephone numbers, dates of birth and, in some cases, encrypted or unencrypted security questions and answers, Yahoo said.
Claims surfaced in early August that a hacker using the name "Peace" was trying to sell the usernames, passwords and dates of birth of Yahoo account users on the dark web — a black market of thousands of secret websites.
Word of the breach is not surprising, given the hacker chatter surrounding the company, said Alex Heid, chief research officer at SecurityScorecard, real-time cybersecurity rating and risk monitoring platform.. There have been numerous underground conversations surrounding the tech giant since late June, he said.
The expected confirmation also comes as Yahoo looks to complete its $4.8. billion sale of its core Internet business to media giant Verizon Communications.
Should it prove to be so, and given the unsettled nature of Yahoo's ownership just now, “regulators should be concerned with who will take responsibility for the response to this compromise. It can be easy for the ‘right thing to do’ to slip through the cracks in a multi-billion dollar transition, said Tim Erlin, senior director of IT security and risk strategy at Tripwire, a computer security firm.
Yahoo Chief Executive Officer Marissa Meyer stands to earn as much as $44 million if she leaves the company as part of that deal.
Credential stuffing
Most consumers might not think there’s much in their Yahoo account that would be of use to hackers, which typically might include only their email and Yahoo password. However, that simple duo offers multiple uses for ingenious hackers bent on extracting the maximum value from information, experts say.
First, the password. According to a Gartner survey, 50% of users reuse their passwords across multiple platforms. So armed with an email address and Yahoo password, hackers might be able to gain access to multiple accounts.
The technique is called “credential stuffing” and it’s become epidemic over the last year and a half, said Avivah Litan, a vice president and analyst at Gartner Research.
“The bad guys get lists of user IDs and password and then test them, they run through them at all the sites they want to attack to see where they work,” she said.
Once hackers gain access to other accounts, they are able to assemble dossiers on individuals. These are called “fullz” and include as much information as the hacking group has about a person, assembled from multiple sources over time. Typically they contain the person’s name, Social Security number, birth date, address, birthday, account numbers and other data.
"There are fullz available probably for most of the U.S. population,” Litan said.
The attackers use that information not only to go after bank accounts and credit cards but also for less obvious and harder to track information that is still worth money on the black market.
That can include loyalty points at hotel chains and airlines, avatars and points from online games, stored value in coffee cards. Once accessed, all of these can be siphoned off, bundled and then resold.
“They’ve gone low, slow and distributed. You used to be able to see these attacks coming through really quickly after a breach,” said Litan. Instead, organized crime groups take their time, harvesting points and value.
“It’s very lucrative,” Litan said.
Courtesy: USA Today