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  • 5 million Gmail passwords leaked

    By Lucian Constantin

    An archive containing nearly 5 million Gmail addresses and plain text passwords was posted Tuesday on an online forum, but the data is old and likely sourced from multiple data breaches according to one security firm.

    A user with the online alias “tvskit” posted the archive file on a Bitcoin security forum called btcsec.com and claimed that over 60 percent of credentials found inside are valid.

    “We can’t confirm that it is indeed as much as 60 percent, but a great amount of the leaked data is legitimate,” said Peter Kruse, the chief technology officer of CSIS Security Group, a Danish security company that provides cybercrime intelligence to financial institutions and law enforcement.

    CSIS researchers analyzed the data and concluded that it is up to 3 years old based on correlations with past leaks.

    “We believe the data doesn’t originate from Google directly,” Kruse said via email. “Instead it’s likely it comes from various sources that have been compromised.”

    This means that many of the leaked passwords do not correspond to Gmail or Google accounts, but to accounts on other sites where users have used their Gmail addresses as the user name.

    CSIS has confirmation that at least five of the leaked user name and password pairs were never used as log-in credentials for Gmail or Google accounts. This enforces the idea that the data comes from compromises outside Google, though it’s possible that they were all perpetrated by a single individual or group, Kruse said.

    “The security of our users is of paramount importance to us,” a Google representative said Wednesday via email. “We have no evidence that our systems have been compromised, but whenever we become aware that an account has been compromised, we take steps to help our users secure their accounts.”

    Even if many of the leaked credentials turn out not to be from Google, affected users might still want to change their passwords on websites where they used their Gmail address as the user name. A website called isleaked.com allows users to check if their email address is among those leaked.
    The Hackmaster

  • #2
    For anybody changing their password, you click your profile picture thing in the top right corner, then account, and the page it takes you to will say "Security" in the top tabs. It took me 10 minutes to find it gmail is bloated with so much junk and options that I don't care about.
    July 7, 2019

    https://www.4shared.com/s/fLf6qQ66Zee
    https://www.sendspace.com/file/jvsdbd

    Comment


    • #3
      Evidently, Google has stated that most of them are outdated or don't work, and the ones that do are protected both by anti-scamming systems (geocoding stuff I assume), and by forcing them to change their password.
      Please put all complaints in writing and submit them here.

      Above link not working? Try here.

      Comment


      • #4
        Originally posted by rimsky82 View Post
        Evidently, Google has stated that most of them are outdated or don't work, and the ones that do are protected both by anti-scamming systems (geocoding stuff I assume), and by forcing them to change their password.
        Additionally, there's two-step verification, which helps as well.
        Remember to take it sleazy and stay epic!

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