• Home
  • Index
  • Search
  • Download
  • Server Rules
  • House Roleplay Laws
  • Player Utilities
  • Player Help
  • Forum Utilities
  • Returning Player?
  • Toggle Sidebar
Interactive Nav-Map
Tutorials
New Wiki
ID reference
Restart reference
Players Online
Player Activity
Faction Activity
Player Base Status
Discord Help Channel
DarkStat
Server public configs
POB Administration
Missing Powerplant
Stuck in Connecticut
Account Banned
Lost Ship/Account
POB Restoration
Disconnected
Member List
Forum Stats
Show Team
View New Posts
View Today's Posts
Calendar
Help
Archive Mode




Hi there Guest,  
Existing user?   Sign in    Create account
Login
Username:
Password: Lost Password?
 
  Discovery Gaming Community The Community Real Life Discussion Software & Hardware
« Previous 1 … 51 52 53 54 55 … 91 Next »
Warning: Webmail may be compromised

Server Time (24h)

Players Online

Active Events - Scoreboard

Latest activity

Warning: Webmail may be compromised
Offline Fletcher
10-06-2009, 08:03 PM,
#1
Member
Posts: 5,473
Threads: 952
Joined: Apr 2008

It seems a major amount of Hotmail, Yahoo and Gmail account's passwords have been posted on illicit sites.

I recommend changing your password to a Strong Level.

http://www.pcmag.com/article2/0,2817,2353820,00.asp

PC Magazine Wrote:Gmail Also Nailed by Phishing Attacks, Google Says

Over this past weekend the credentials for several thousand Microsoft Hotmail accounts were posted online. Microsoft has confirmed the list was authentic, worked to get it taken down and deactivated the accounts. If your account was affected you can fill out this form to reclaim account access.

Then today Google told the BBC that Gmail had been similarly targeted. The BBC reported that they had seen a list with more than 30,000 names and passwords.

Microsoft says that the Hotmail accounts appear to have been compromised through "a likely phishing scheme," not through any problem in Hotmail. Google's response was similar: "We recently became aware of an industry-wide phishing scheme through which hackers gained user credentials for web-based mail accounts including GMail accounts...As soon as we learned of the attack, we forced password resets on the affected accounts. We will continue to force password resets on additional accounts when we become aware of them."

What more is there to say about such problems? Users need to be able to recognize illicit attempts to elicit their account information. The Microsoft blog linked to above has some good, general advice on recognizing phishing scams.

It's also possible for attackers to steal account access if the passwords through other attacks, such as dictionary attacks which attempt to use common words (such as "password") as the password. Brian Krebs of the Washington Post has some good general guidelines on password selection in his report on this attack.

Pastebin, the site on which the Hotmail accounts were posted, is designed for programmers to share source code. Since the news broke of this disclosure, the owner, a completely innocent bystander in this business, has had to take the site down and work, undoubtedly for free, on measures to secure his site against such abuse in the future. I feel sorry for him, at least as sorry as I feel for people who gave up their e-mail passwords unwittingly.

Originally posted to the PCMag.com @Work blog.

Take care, and shuffle those passwords.

[Image: 7220a57d19cexl1.jpg]
"Oh chuffing blimey, another day, another person being whiney!"
Fletcher's Feedback and Stories Thread
Reply  
Offline AJBeast
10-06-2009, 08:08 PM,
#2
Member
Posts: 1,477
Threads: 55
Joined: Aug 2008

Thanks for the heads up , changing all of them now
Reply  
Offline Virus
10-06-2009, 08:27 PM, (This post was last modified: 10-06-2009, 08:28 PM by Virus.)
#3
Member
Posts: 4,311
Threads: 257
Joined: Oct 2005

I wonder if $fhsi#SE4;'^= is a strong enough password.

*changes his password regardless*

[Image: virussig3.png]
Into the Maelstrom - A Measure of Salvation - Reaver Company Database
Reply  
Offline swift
10-06-2009, 08:50 PM,
#4
Member
Posts: 2,838
Threads: 61
Joined: Jul 2008

The passwords were stolen from people who were gullible enough to answer e-mails from the "administration" requesting their passwords.
Gotta facepalm a bit.

<span style="font-familyTonguealatino Linotype">
<span style="color:#000000">All morons hate it when you call them a moron.
</span></span>
<span style="color:#33FFFF">The CFF</span>
<span style="color:#33FF33">CFF Communication Channel and RP Collection</span>
  Reply  
Offline Dopamino
10-06-2009, 08:58 PM,
#5
Member
Posts: 3,522
Threads: 70
Joined: Jul 2007

Somehow spammers were able to send stuff from my Hotmail address recently. I never give out my password anywhere and I didn't get phished. Scary stuff.

[Image: GlossyNew2copy-1.png]
I mostly lurk around Media Center these days.
  Reply  
Offline Benjamin
10-06-2009, 09:03 PM,
#6
Member
Posts: 1,794
Threads: 9
Joined: Jan 2009

Yeah I feel bad for the pastebin guy; I use that site all the time.

Join Cryer Pharmaceuticals
Reply  
Offline Canadianguy
10-06-2009, 09:24 PM,
#7
Member
Posts: 780
Threads: 5
Joined: Jul 2009

I know a way some get MSN passwords.
They use a website known as MSNblocked or whatever.
Its not from MSN and it ask you your email and password saying "We dont keep them" and the first thing that happen after you enter your infos there is that they use your account to send the link to the website to all your contacts.

Still, my password is pretty darn secure ATM.
I will still change in. No need to take any kind of risk.

[Image: RobertJenson.png]
  Reply  


  • View a Printable Version
  • Subscribe to this thread


Users browsing this thread:
1 Guest(s)



Powered By MyBB, © 2002-2026 MyBB Group. Theme © 2014 iAndrew & DiscoveryGC
  • Contact Us
  •  Lite mode
Linear Mode
Threaded Mode