By - Jaikumar Vijayan
Category - LinkedIn Strategies
Source - http://www.computerworld.com
Computerworld - In response to widespread reports of a massive data breach at LinkedIn, the company Wednesday confirmed that passwords belonging to "some" of its members have been compromised.
Category - LinkedIn Strategies
Source - http://www.computerworld.com
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| LinkedIn Strategies |
In a carefully worded blog post,
LinkedIn director Vicente Silveira said the company has confirmed that
an unspecified number of hashed passwords posted publicly on a Russian
hacker forum earlier this week, "correspond to LinkedIn accounts."
Silveira
made no mention of how the passwords may have ended up on the forums
but noted that LinkedIn is continuing to investigate.
"Members
that have accounts associated with the compromised passwords will notice
that their LinkedIn account password is no longer valid," Silveria
said.
Users of the social networking site for professionals will
also receive an email from LinkedIn with instructions on how to reset
their passwords. The email will not contain any links that users will
need to click on to reset their password, he noted. Affected customers
will also receive a note from LinkedIn with more information on what
happened and why they are being asked to reset their passwords, Silveira
said.
Earlier Silveira had posted a separate note urging
LinkedIn members to change their passwords and providing them with tips
on how to create strong passwords.
Silveira was responding to
numerous reports earlier Wednesday that hackers accessed close to 6.5
million hashed passwords from a LinkedIn database and posted it publicly
on a Russian hacker forum. According to security
researchers who had seen the compromised data, more than 300,000 of the
hashed passwords have already been decrypted and posted online in clear
text.
LinkedIn had earlier said it was looking into those reports but had not confirmed the breach.
Tal
Be'ery, security research leader at Imperva, claims to have seen the
stolen data and said much more than 6.5 million passwords might have
been compromised.
According to Be'ery, the passwords that have
been posted online appear to be only those passwords that the hackers
needed help in cracking. What the breached password list is missing are
the usual easy-to-guess passwords that people commonly use to control
access to online accounts, he said. The LinkedIn password file does not
contain any of the common passwords that Imperva's researchers have
typically run across when analyzing similar password breaches, he said.
"Most
likely, the hacker has figured out the easy passwords and needs help
with less common ones." So it's likely that only the more complicated
passwords have been revealed so far, he theorized.
The breached
list shows that LinkedIn did not use best practices in protecting the
passwords, he said. The hashes that were used to mask the real passwords
were so-called unsalted SHA-1 hashes. SHA-1 is a hashing algorithm that
is used to protect passwords. Because SHA-1 isn't foolproof, security
experts have for some time recommended that organizations use a
technique called "salting" to make passwords harder to crack. With
salting, an application applies a random string of characters to a
password before it is hashed. The process ensures that even if two
passwords are identical, their hashes will be unique.
Source - http://www.computerworld.com/s/article/9227834/LinkedIn_confirms_some_passwords_leaked_

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