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- Q17514176 subject Q15308497.
- Q17514176 subject Q15630654.
- Q17514176 subject Q7012863.
- Q17514176 subject Q8503659.
- Q17514176 subject Q8551730.
- Q17514176 abstract "The 2014 Russian hacker password theft is an alleged hacking incident resulting in the possible theft of over 1.2 billion internet credentials, including usernames and passwords, with hundreds of millions of corresponding e-mail addresses. The data breach was first reported by the New York Times (and then reported in many other media) after being allegedly discovered and reported by Milwaukee-based information security company, Hold Security.420,000 websites are reported to be affected. According to a New York Times source, some big companies know that their user's credentials are among the stolen. Hold Security did not disclose which sites were compromised, but, instead, offered two separate services, one for website owners and one for consumers to check if they're affected.The service for website owners costs $10 a month. The check for consumers is free.Hold Security described the group responsible for the hack as a small group of “fewer than a dozen men in their 20s ... based in a small city in south central Russia, the region flanked by Kazakhstan and Mongolia,” and dubbed the group CyberVor (Russian, lit. "cyber thief"). Hold claimed the hack was perpetrated through the use of SQL injection. According to a Forbes article, Hold Security says that not all the 1.2 billion credentials were stolen this way, there are also ones that CyberVor simply bought from people that used other means, and Hold Security doesn't know what the split is.".
- Q17514176 wikiPageExternalLink identity.holdsecurity.com.
- Q17514176 wikiPageWikiLink Q15308497.
- Q17514176 wikiPageWikiLink Q15630654.
- Q17514176 wikiPageWikiLink Q18385836.
- Q17514176 wikiPageWikiLink Q2798820.
- Q17514176 wikiPageWikiLink Q37836.
- Q17514176 wikiPageWikiLink Q506059.
- Q17514176 wikiPageWikiLink Q7012863.
- Q17514176 wikiPageWikiLink Q7737.
- Q17514176 wikiPageWikiLink Q8503659.
- Q17514176 wikiPageWikiLink Q8551730.
- Q17514176 wikiPageWikiLink Q956568.
- Q17514176 comment "The 2014 Russian hacker password theft is an alleged hacking incident resulting in the possible theft of over 1.2 billion internet credentials, including usernames and passwords, with hundreds of millions of corresponding e-mail addresses. The data breach was first reported by the New York Times (and then reported in many other media) after being allegedly discovered and reported by Milwaukee-based information security company, Hold Security.420,000 websites are reported to be affected.".
- Q17514176 label "2014 Russian hacker password theft".