Security

Hacker who stole 620 million records strikes again, stealing 127 million more

Comment

A hacker who stole close to 620 million user records from 16 websites has stolen another 127 million records from eight more websites, TechCrunch has learned.

The hacker, whose listing was the previously disclosed data for about $20,000 in bitcoin on a dark web marketplace, stole the data last year from several major sites — some that had already been disclosed, like more than 151 million records from MyFitnessPal and 25 million records from Animoto. But several other hacked sites on the marketplace listing didn’t know or hadn’t disclosed yet — such as 500px and Coffee Meets Bagel.

The Register, which first reported the story, said the data included names, email addresses and scrambled passwords, and in some cases other login and account data — though no financial data was included.

Now the same hacker has eight additional marketplace entries after their original listings were pulled offline, including:

  • 18 million records from travel booking site Ixigo
  • Live-video streaming site YouNow had 40 million records stolen
  • Houzz, which recently disclosed a data breach, is listed with 57 million records stolen
  • Ge.tt had 1.8 million accounts stolen
  • 450,000 records from cryptocurrency site Coinmama.
  • Roll20, a gaming site, had 4 million records listed
  • Stronghold Kingdoms, a multiplayer online game, had 5 million records listed
  • 1 million records from pet care delivery service PetFlow

According to the hacker’s listings, Ixigo and PetFlow used the old and outdated MD5 hashing algorithm to scramble passwords, which these days is easy to unscramble. YouNow doesn’t store passwords, a spokesperson said.

In all, the hacker is selling the hacked data for about $14,500 in bitcoin.

The dark web marketplace listing for Houzz. (Image: TechCrunch)

Ariel Ainhoren, research team leader at Israeli security firm IntSights, said that the hacker may have used the same security flaw to target vulnerable sites.

Six of the 16 databases were running the same back-end PostgreSQL database software, said Ainhoren in an email to TechCrunch. In successfully exploiting the bug, the hacker was able to “dump” the database to a file and download it.

“We’re still analyzing it, but it could have been that he used some kind of vulnerability that surfaced around that time and wasn’t patched by these companies or a totally new unknown vulnerability,” he said. “As most of these sites were not known breaches, it seems we’re dealing here with a hacker that did the hacks by himself, and not just someone who obtained it from somewhere else and now just resold it.”

When reached, Jonathan Katz, a contributor for PostgreSQL, said the open-source project was “currently unaware of any patched or unpatched vulnerabilities that could have caused these breaches.”

“There are many factors that need to be taken into consideration when securing a database system that go beyond the database software. We have often found that data breaches into a PostgreSQL database involve an indirect attack vector, such as a flaw in an application accessing PostgreSQL or a suboptimal policy around data management,” he said. “When it comes to vulnerabilities, the PostgreSQL community has a dedicated security team that evaluates and fixes issues and, in the spirit of open source collaboration, transparently reports on and educates our users about them.”

https://techcrunch.com/2018/12/26/cybersecurity-101-security-guides-protect-privacy/

More TechCrunch

Pakistani startup PostEx is entering Saudi Arabia as first global market after hitting $21 million ARR in the South Asian nation.

Pakistan’s PostEx to enter new markets, starting with Saudi Arabia

The AI boom is fueling the demand for data centers and, in turn, driving up water consumption. (Water is used to cool the computing equipment inside data centers.) According to…

Demand for AI is driving data center water consumption sky high

The group honking was an unintended consequence of Waymo’s tech.

The Waymo robotaxi honking problem has been resolved for real this time

OpenAI and Anthropic spend billions of dollars a year training models like GPT-4 and Claude, but competitive price dumping is making the business around these platforms rather precarious. Aidan Gomez,…

What margins? AI’s business model is changing fast, says Cohere founder

Hello, and welcome back to TechCrunch Space. Did you hear? Bridgit Mendler will be joining me onstage at this year’s TechCrunch Disrupt to talk all things ground stations. She’s just…

TechCrunch Space: Spending less

What’s the point of chatting with a human-like bot if it’s an unreliable narrator — and has a colorless personality? That’s the question I’ve been turning over in my head…

Gemini Live could use some more rehearsals

Zoom on Monday announced a new single-user webinar feature that caps out at 1 million attendees. The addition comes less than a month after the #WinWithBlackWomen fundraiser for Vice President…

Now a million people can watch you fumble Zoom’s screen-share settings at once

On Sunday, former President Donald Trump posted a collection of memes on Truth Social — the platform owned by his media company — that make it seem like Taylor Swift…

Could Trump’s AI-generated Taylor Swift endorsement be illegal?

Few truly autonomous systems are deployed on the battlefield, but one startup is looking to change that with robotic systems that use cooperative behavior to boost troops’ intelligence and tactical…

Swarmbotics founders grew ‘obsessed with robot swarms’ and now plan to bring them to the battlefield

Former a16z-investor Balaji Srinivasan has booked out an island in Singapore to create his own “Network School.”

Former a16z VC Balaji Srinivasan obtained a private island for his new longevity ‘technocapitalist’ school

The flight tracking company says the misconfiguration exposed customer names, addresses, and pilot’s data, as well as Social Security numbers.

FlightAware warns that some customers’ info has been ‘exposed,’ including Social Security numbers

Over 30% of 7- to 9-year-olds have an X account, according to a new report.

A surprising number of ‘iPad Kids’ are on X, study finds

Apple Podcasts can now be streamed from the web. Apple announced on Monday that its Apple Podcasts app is now available on all major web browsers (Chrome, Edge, Firefox, and…

Apple Podcasts launches on the web

Historic vehicles, flowing champagne and fashion have dominated the events at Monterey Car Week for decades now. But a change is afoot: EVs, tech-centric vehicles, startups and a heavy dose…

From a $2.5 million hyper car to a Spanish track-ready EV, here were the most interesting EVs at Monterey Car Week

The clock is ticking! You’ve got just 5 days left to lock in discounted tickets for TechCrunch Disrupt 2024. Save up to $600 on individual ticket types. This limited-time offer ends…

5 days left to secure ticket savings for TechCrunch Disrupt 2024

General Motors is cutting around 1,000 software workers around the world in a bid to focus on more “high-priority” initiatives like improving its Super Cruise driver assistance system, the quality…

GM cuts 1,000 software jobs as it prioritizes quality and AI

Popular iPad design app Procreate is coming out against generative AI, and has vowed never to introduce generative AI features into its products. The company said on its website that…

Procreate takes a stand against generative AI, vows to never incorporate the tech into its products

Mike Lynch, the investor and high-profile founder of U.K. tech firm Autonomy, has been declared missing at sea after the yacht he was on, the Bayesian, capsized in a storm…

Mike Lynch, recently acquitted in HP-Autonomy fraud case, is missing after yacht capsized off Sicily

ElevenLabs, which develops AI-powered tools to create and edit synthetic voices, is making its Reader app available globally with support for 32 languages.

ElevenLabs’ text-to-speech app Reader is now available globally

AMD is acquiring ZT Systems, which provides compute design and infrastructure for AI, cloud and general purpose computing, for $4.9 billion.

AMD to acquire infrastructure player ZT Systems for $4.9B to amp up its AI ecosystem play

Amazon is considering shifting its payments offerings in India into a standalone app, three sources familiar with the matter told TechCrunch, as the e-commerce giant aims to boost usage of…

Amazon considers moving Amazon Pay into a standalone app in India

Root helps food and beverage companies collect primary data on their agricultural supply chains. 

As CO2 emissions from supply chains come into focus, this startup is aiming at farms

In May, the African fintech processed up to $70 million in monthly payment volume.

Waza comes out of stealth with $8M to power global trade for African businesses

This post contains spoilers for the movie “Alien: Romulus” In the long-running “Alien” movie franchise, the Weyland-Yutani Corporation can’t seem to let go of a terrible idea: It keeps trying…

Digitally resurrecting actors is still a terrible idea

Thomas Ingenlath is having perhaps a little too much fun in his Polestar 3, silently rocketing away from stop signs and swinging through tightening bends, grinning like a man far…

With the Polestar 3 now ‘weeks’ away, its CEO looks to make company ‘self-sustaining’

Some parents have reservations about the South Korean government’s plans to bring tablets with AI-powered textbooks into classrooms, according to a report in Financial Times. The tablets are scheduled to…

South Korea’s AI textbook program faces skepticism from parents

Featured Article

How VC Pippa Lamb ended up on ‘Industry’ — one of the hottest shows on TV

Season 3 of “Industry” focuses on the fictional bank Pierpoint and blends the worlds — and drama — of tech, media, government and finance.

How VC Pippa Lamb ended up on ‘Industry’ — one of the hottest shows on TV

Featured Article

Selling a startup in an ‘acqui-hire’ is more lucrative than it seems, founders and VCs say

Selling under such circumstances is often not as poor of an outcome for founders and key staff as it initially seems. 

Selling a startup in an ‘acqui-hire’ is more lucrative than it seems, founders and VCs say

While the rapid pace of funding has slowed, many fintechs are continuing to see growth and expand their teams.

These  fintech companies are hiring, despite a rough market in 2024

This is just one area of leadership where Parker Conrad takes a contrarian approach. He also said he doesn’t believe in top-down management.

Rippling’s Parker Conrad says founders should ‘go all the way to the ground’ to run their companies