In what maybe one of the biggest yet at the same time least publicized hacking incidents, the forums of Boxee.tv
has been hacked and the fruits of those efforts have been publicized.
The security breach yielded information about 158,128 users, including
data that can be used to possibly comprise the users' other accounts.
The actual hacking incident actually took place last week, though
Boxee has not yet acknowledged it at all. The revelation and the warning
had to come from third-party sources, such as Australian security
researcher Scott A. McIntyre, who received a copy of the database and
whose clients appeared to be one of those affected by the breach. This
was confirmed separately by Troy Hunt, another Aussie researcher, who
included the dumped information into his "Have I been Pwned" online
security service.
The scope of the hacking is quite expansive, not to mention
frightening. Included in the database dump are around 172,000 email
addresses, birth dates, IP addresses, and all messaging history. It even
contains scrambled passwords which can still be cracked to reveal the
real password underneath. Given this wealth of detail, as well as the
almost predictable security habits of people, this information can
potentially be used to hack into those users' other accounts.
And indeed, this is the fact that password management service
LastPass wants to point out. The company has sent emails to its users
warning them of the hacking incident and advising them to change their
password for the forum. LastPass also has a tool for searching for other
services where users have applied the same password, of course, as long
as those passwords are managed by LastPass. Given how users commonly
reuse the same password for multiple sites, that is quite likely.
That said, the security breach actually occurred only in the Boxee.tv
forum and doesn't directly affect all Boxee users, unless they use the
same credentials for both the service and the community forum. Boxee's
silence on the matter is also quite deplorable but not unusual. Like
many similar instances of late, the incident should be a reminder to
users to observe security best practices as much as they can, or at
least make use of reliable and secure services that help make it
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