
Linkedin data breach 2016 password#
As for LinkedIn users, if you didn't already change your password four years ago, change it again, especially if you use it on other services (and please stop reusing passwords). In July 2016, Quora account of Google CEO Sundar Pichai was hacked by a. The lesson: For LinkedIn, the lesson is the same as four years ago: don't store passwords in an insecure way. A 2012 data breach that was thought to have exposed 6.5 million hashed passwords for LinkedIn users instead likely impacted more than 117 million accounts, the company. It is certainly concerning that there was a data breach on LinkedIn in June 2021. "We don't know how much was taken," Durzy told me in a phone call. Durzy, however, also admitted that the 6.5 million hashes that were posted online in 2012 were not necessarily all of the passwords stolen. When reached for comment on Tuesday, LinkedIn spokesperson Hani Durzy told Motherboard that the company's security team was looking into the incident, but that at the time they couldn't confirm whether the data was legitimate.

"Having a password out there feels like someone being able to let themselves in to your private space whenever they like, without you knowing," the victim, who asked to remain anonymous, said in an email.

One of the victims told Motherboard that the password in the sample was their current one, though he changed it as soon as Hunt reached out no notify him of the breach. Motherboard was able to confirm a third victim. Two of them confirmed to Hunt that they indeed were users of LinkedIn and that the password he shared with them was the one they were using at the time of the breach. Troy Hunt, a security researcher who maintains the breach notification site " Have I Been Pwned?," reached out to some of the victims of the data breach.
Linkedin data breach 2016 cracked#
One of the operators of LeakedSource told Motherboard in an online chat that so far they have cracked "90% of the passwords in 72 hours." "To my knowledge the database was kept within a small group of Russians." People may not have taken it very seriously back then as it was not spread," one of the people behind LeakedSource told me. Of those, around 117 million have both emails and encrypted passwords. Both Peace and the one of the people behind LeakedSource said that there are 167 million accounts in the hacked database.

The paid hacked data search engine LeakedSource also claims to have obtained the data. Peace is selling the data on the dark web illegal marketplace The Real Deal for 5 bitcoin (around $2,200). Turns out it was much worse than anybody thought. At the time, only around 6.5 million encrypted passwords were posted online, and LinkedIn never clarified how many users were affected by that breach. The hacker, who goes by the name "Peace," told Motherboard that the data was stolen during the LinkedIn breach of 2012. The company announced this morning that another data set from the hack, which contains over 100 million LinkedIn members. A hacker is trying to sell the account information, including emails and passwords, of 117 million LinkedIn users. A LinkedIn hack from back in 2012 is still causing problems for its users.
