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Massive Yahoo Hack – 500 Million Accounts Compromised

So if you are a Yahoo user (which most of us probably have been at some point) you will be aware of the Yahoo Hack – with 200 Million e-mail addresses being up for sale on the black market it seems up to 500 million have been compromised in one of the biggest hacks yet.
Massive Yahoo Hack - 500 Million Accounts Compromised
It seems likely it was some kind of nation-state attack, and the break-in actually occurred in late 2014. So if for some reason you signed up for a new Yahoo webmail account since then you’ll be safe.
Hackers strongly believed to be state-sponsored swiped account records for 500 million or more Yahoo! webmail users. And who knew there were that many people using its email?
The troubled online giant said on Thursday that the break-in occurred in late 2014, and that names, email addresses, telephone numbers, dates of birth, hashed passwords and, in some cases, encrypted or unencrypted security questions and answers, were lifted.
This comes after a miscreant calling themselves Peace was touting copies of the Yahoo! account database on the dark web. At the time, in early August, Yahoo! said it was aware of claims that sensitive information was being sold online – and then today, nearly two months later, it alerted the world to the embarrassing security breach.
“We have confirmed that a copy of certain user account information was stolen from the company’s network in late 2014 by what it believes is a state-sponsored actor,” said Yahoo!’s chief information security officer Bob Lord on Tumblr today.
“The ongoing investigation suggests that stolen information did not include unprotected passwords, payment card data, or bank account information; payment card data and bank account information are not stored in the system that the investigation has found to be affected.

I’m surprised Yahoo is even still around to be honest, it’s a relic from an era gone by. The only significant impact they’ve had on my Internet in the past decade was to completely screw up Flickr (which I loved).
The passwords are hashed (mostly with bcrypt) and no real sensitive date was leaked (payment details, SSNs etc) – but it’s still a pretty bad compromise.
“Based on the ongoing investigation, Yahoo believes that information associated with at least 500 million user accounts was stolen and the investigation has found no evidence that the state-sponsored actor is currently in Yahoo’s network. Yahoo is working closely with law enforcement on this matter.”
Yahoo! has said it will email all those thought to be affected by the theft and is advising everyone who hasn’t changed their passwords in the last two years to do so. If you’ve forgotten your password however, you could be out of luck – security questions that Yahoo! was storing in unencrypted format have been deleted from the system.
Unlike others, Yahoo! doesn’t appear to be offering any kind of credit monitoring service for affected customers, but helpfully includes a link for users to check their own credit records. It also advises users to be on their guard against unsolicited emails.
The statement leaves many questions unanswered. For example – how many of these email accounts are actually active for a start. It’s difficult to imagine that Yahoo! actually has half a billion active email users and a quick poll around the office shows just over half of Vulture West staff have a Yahoo! account but that none of us have used it in the last year.
Yahoo! also fails to point out that the chief benefit to the hackers isn’t going to be their email accounts, but other online identities. People foolishly tend to reuse passwords and security question answers and that’s where the main value of the data comes from.
Unfortunately for you, if you forgot your password and haven’t changed it in the past 2 years you may be out of luck as security questions were stored in plain text and have since been deleted.

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