majorlinux, to infosec
@majorlinux@toot.majorshouse.com avatar

Time to mix up those passwords!

Roku hit by credential stuffing attack - Desk Chair Analysts

https://dcanalysts.net/roku-hit-by-credential-stuffing-attack/

gcluley, to Cybersecurity
@gcluley@mastodon.green avatar

Gotta Hack 'Em All: Pokémon passwords reset after attack.

Read more in my article on the Bitdefender blog: https://www.bitdefender.com/blog/hotforsecurity/gotta-hack-em-all-pokemon-passwords-reset-after-attack/

gcluley, to Cybersecurity
@gcluley@mastodon.green avatar

Streaming company Roku has revealed that over 15,000 customers' accounts were hacked using stolen login credentials from unrelated data breaches, in a campaign that lasted from December 2023 to February 21, 2024

Read more in my article on the Bitdefender blog: https://www.bitdefender.com/blog/hotforsecurity/hackers-target-roku-15-000-accounts-compromised-in-data-breach/

majorlinux, to infosec
@majorlinux@toot.majorshouse.com avatar

I don't think I have enough free space to store 'em!

26 billion personal records and passwords have been leaked online - Desk Chair Analysts

https://dcanalysts.net/26-billion-personal-records-and-passwords-have-been-leaked-online/

mattotcha, to random
@mattotcha@mastodon.social avatar
itnewsbot, to medical
@itnewsbot@schleuss.online avatar

23andMe told victims of data breach that suing is futile, letter shows - Enlarge (credit: Bloomberg / Contributor | Bloomberg)

23andMe ... - https://arstechnica.com/?p=1993685

majorlinux, to infosec
@majorlinux@toot.majorshouse.com avatar

Not how I expected genetics data to be used, but just as bad.

More 23andMe user records appear online - Desk Chair Analysts

https://dcanalysts.net/more-23andme-user-records-appear-online/

epixoip, to random

Happy !

I've cracked billions of from tens of thousands of in the past 12+ years, and because of this, I likely know at least one for 90% of people on the Internet. And I'm not alone! While I primarily crack breached passwords for research purposes and the thrill of the sport, others are selling your breached passwords to criminals who leverage them in and attacks.

How can you keep your accounts safe?

  • Use a ! I recommend @bitwarden and @1password

  • Use a style - four or more words selected at random - for passwords you have to commit to memory, like your master password!

  • Enable MFA for important online accounts, including cloud-based password managers!

  • Harden your master password by tweaking your password manager's KDF settings! For , use Argon2id with 64MB memory, 3 iterations, 4 parallelism. For and other PBKDF2 based password managers, set the iteration count to at least 600,000.

  • Use unique, randomly generated passwords for all your accounts! Use your password manager to generate random 14-16 character passwords for everything. Modern password cracking is heavily optimized for human-generated passwords, because humans are highly predictable. Randomness defeats this and forces attackers to resort to incremental brute force! There's no trick you can do to make a secure, uncrackable password on your own - your meat glob will only betray you.

  • Use an ad blocker like Origin to keep you safe from password-stealing and other browser based threats!

  • Don't fall for attacks and other social engineering attacks! Browser-based password managers help defend against phishing attacks because they'll never autofill your passwords on fake login pages. Think before you click, and never give your passwords to anyone, not even if they offer you chocolate or weed.

  • : require ad blockers, invest in an enterprise password management solution, audit password manager logs to ensure employes aren't sharing passwords outside the org, implement a Fine Grained Password Policy that requires a minimum of 20 characters to encourage the use of long passphrases, implement a password filter to block commonly used password patterns and compromised passwords, disable authentication and disable RC4 for , disable legacy broadcast protocols like LLMNR and NBT-NS, require mandatory signing, use Group Managed Service Accounts instead of shared passwords, monitor public data breaches for employee credentials, and crack your own passwords to audit the effectiveness of your password policy and user training!

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