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Russian Hackers Steal a Billion Usernames and Passwords

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Russian Hackers Steal a Billion Usernames and Passwords

Wednesday 06 August 2014 10:00 Written by: Caroline Baldwin A group of Russian cyber criminals attacked 500 million email addresses and stole 1.2 billion usernames and passwords. According to US cyber security company Hold Security, the gang has the largest cache of stolen data in the history of cyber crime.
Russian hackers steal over a billion usernames and passwords

Wednesday 06 August 2014 10:00
Written by: Caroline Baldwin

A group of Russian cyber criminals attacked 500 million email addresses and stole 1.2 billion usernames and passwords.

According to US cyber security company Hold Security, the gang has the largest cache of stolen data in the history of cyber crime.

140415_0111.jpgDenys Rudyi – Fotolia

CyberVor: The Russian hackers steal usernames and passwords

In a blog post written by Hold Security, the company said it took seven months of research to track down the data breach. The company nicknamed the Russian gang CyberVor (“vor” means “thief” in Russian).

The company claimed CyberVor hacked over 420,000 web and FTP sites to obtain over 4.5 billion records, 1.2 billion of which “appear to be unique”.

How Did the Russian Hackers Steal Usernames and Passwords?

Of the 420,000 websites, the hackers didn’t target just large company websites. “Instead, they targeted every site their victims visited. With hundreds of thousands sites affected, the list includes many leaders in virtually all industries across the world, as well as a multitude of small or even personal websites,” said the blogpost.

Hold stated that the Russian hackers obtained databases of stolen credentials from other hackers on the black market. These were then used to attack e-mail providers, social media, and other websites to send spam to victims and install malicious redirections.

CyberVor also accessed data from botnet networks. Botnets control a network of infected computers from a single system. They track victims’ systems to identify weaknesses, which they then manipulate to steal data from websites’ databases.

Hold Security advises companies to check if websites are susceptible to SQL injection.

“It is hard to spot and it may be not on your main site but on one of your auxiliary sites instead. If your websites are vulnerable, hackers will victimize you again,” the company warned.

Russian blogger law

Earlier this week, Russia also came under the spotlight for implementing its controversial blogger law. The new information security law places restrictions on Russian bloggers and social media users. The law states Russian bloggers cannot be anonymous and that popular blogs must register with a regulator.

In March 2014, security experts warned that Ukraine and Russia were locked in a cyber stand-off amid diplomatic efforts to reduce political tensions between the two countries.

Ukraine accused Russia of disrupting mobile communications.

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