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Dropbox Data Breach: What Really Happened

Posted: June 6, 2016 to Cybersecurity.

Tags: Data Breach, Cloud Security, Malware

Unfortunately for Dropbox, last week several identity theft protection services including LifeLock wrongly reported that 73 million usernames and passwords had been stolen in a data breach on the cloud storage company. The problem is that Dropbox didn’t have a data breach, Tumblr did. The source of the mistake was the identity monitoring firm CSID. CSID, which is currently in negotiations to be bought by Experian, uses online sources that in the past have been accurate to tip them off on new data leaks. In this case a hacker who goes by the handle “w0rm” posted a tweet with a link to a file that he claimed contained 100 million username and passwords for Dropbox accounts. In reality, the file contained 73 million and CSID couldn’t verify whether or not they actually were for Dropbox. Ultimately, CSID took the hacker’s word for it and wrongly blamed Dropbox for the breach. Apparently, analysts at CSID don’t test stolen passwords by using them to attempt to log into the breached site, nor do they attempt to make an account using the stolen email addresses. If the information came from that site, it wouldn’t allow a second account with the same email address to be created. That said, they do comb through usernames and passwords for other information that may point to their source. For example, in the LinkedIn breach many of the passwords had some variation “linkedin” contained in it. It’s never a good idea to use the same password across multiple services and Dropbox encourages users to create strong and unique passwords. Additionally, even though they didn’t have a breach, they are reminding their users that they offer two-factor identification. If you have an account that contains any personal information, you should really be using two-factor authentication if it’s offered, unfortunately less than 1% of Dropbox users do.

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About the Author

Craig Petronella, CEO and Founder of Petronella Technology Group
CEO, Founder & AI Architect, Petronella Technology Group

Craig Petronella founded Petronella Technology Group in 2002 and has spent more than 30 years working at the intersection of cybersecurity, AI, compliance, and digital forensics. He holds the CMMC Registered Practitioner credential (RP-1372) issued by the Cyber AB, is an NC Licensed Digital Forensics Examiner (License #604180-DFE), and completed MIT Professional Education programs in AI, Blockchain, and Cybersecurity. Craig also holds CompTIA Security+, CCNA, and Hyperledger certifications.

He is an Amazon #1 Best-Selling Author of 15+ books on cybersecurity and compliance, host of the Encrypted Ambition podcast (95+ episodes on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, and Amazon), and a cybersecurity keynote speaker with 200+ engagements at conferences, law firms, and corporate boardrooms. Craig serves as Contributing Editor for Cybersecurity at NC Triangle Attorney at Law Magazine and is a guest lecturer at NCCU School of Law. He has served as a digital forensics expert witness in federal and state court cases involving cybercrime, cryptocurrency fraud, SIM-swap attacks, and data breaches.

Under his leadership, Petronella Technology Group has served 2,500+ clients, maintained a zero-breach record among compliant clients, earned a BBB A+ rating every year since 2003, and been featured as a cybersecurity authority on CBS, ABC, NBC, FOX, and WRAL. The company leverages SOC 2 Type II certified platforms and specializes in AI implementation, managed cybersecurity, CMMC/HIPAA/SOC 2 compliance, and digital forensics for businesses across the United States.

CMMC-RP NC Licensed DFE MIT Certified CompTIA Security+ Expert Witness 15+ Books
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