Data Breach Reveals 100k IEEE.org Members' Plaintext Passwords 160
First time accepted submitter radudragusin writes "IEEE suffered a data breach which I discovered on September 18. For a few days I was uncertain what to do with the information and the data. Yesterday I let them know, and they fixed (at least partially) the problem. The usernames and passwords kept in plaintext were publicly available on their FTP server for at least one month prior to my discovery. Among the almost 100.000 compromised users are Apple, Google, IBM, Oracle and Samsung employees, as well as researchers from NASA, Stanford and many other places. I did not and will not make the raw data available, but I took the liberty to analyse it briefly."
AFAICT IEEE didn't warn its members yet... (Score:4, Interesting)
Why do we need to learn this from the newspaper?
Re:For God's Sake (Score:5, Interesting)
I'm a scientist. I write papers that are published in academic journals and I review such papers for journals. Journals use editorial managers to, well, manage, the entire process and you'd be surprised how often those send out automated e-mails that, helpfully, contain my login and password IN PLAINTEXT, just in case I might have forgotten (even if I did not request the password).
In general terms, if you use a website that is able to remind you of your password if you forgot, consider that password known to the world and all other accounts that use the same or a similar password at high risk of being compromised.
Oh and I have an Obligatory XKCD [xkcd.com] too.
Re:Secure password message falls on deaf ears (Score:5, Interesting)
The question becomes though - what benefit does it do me to have a strong password on sites I don't value?
Like say, /. - why not use "password" or "123456"? If someone breaks in, BFD.
Likewise, many forums and blogs require registration to do basic things - seems like "password" or "123456" is useful for a one-time throwaway account.
The IEEE has a similar problem. Sometimes it protects great assets (member-only access to papers/journals/standards), othertimes, it's used because some guy wanted the 802.x spec (available for free, registration required), in which case they'd just pick some throwaway password because so what if it's compromised?
And that's the thing - I've seen websites host some files I wanted require changing passwords every 30 days with upper case, lower case, numbers AND symbols. Secure, sure, but everytime I used it (every few months), I needed to reset it. In the end I just ended up using their temporary password, remembered in browser. To me, it wasn't terribly important files (they still needed a license key, available separately). Hell, if I looked, I could've found the same files off a torrent site.
Oh, and "value" of a site is a personal judgement - if you asked a bunch of websites, you'd find they'd value their content "above average".