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Yahoo's Biggest Breach Ever: 1 Billion Accounts Stolen

Posted: December 14, 2016 to News.

Tags: Data Breach, Malware, Compliance

Yahoo dropped a bomb on its users and stockholders on Wednesday: More than one billion users’ accounts have been stolen in an attack that took place in August of 2013. One billion accounts compromised would mean that this breach far surpasses Myspace’s 360 million accounts and 427 million passwords stolen, making it the largest hack in history. Back in September, Yahoo revealed that 500 million accounts had been compromised, but this appears to be a separate event that doesn’t include those accounts. Once the news broke, Yahoo’s shares dropped 2.5% in after-hours trading, possibly threatening Verizon’s $4.8 billion acquisition of the company. Since Yahoo didn’t reveal the previous hack until after they agreed to sell, Verizon already stated then that a hack may affect the terms or price of the sale So far, Yahoo hasn’t been able to find exactly where the intrusion occurred but said a third-party accessed their proprietary code in order to forge cookies that would allow a hacker to access user accounts without a password. While they can’t find the intrusion itself, the company believes that the perpetrators are the same state-sponsored hackers behind the breach disclosed in September. According to Yahoo, credit card, and bank account information is stored on a completely separate system than the one broken into and remains unaffected. However, the hackers were able to make off with most other personal information of their users, including usernames, email addresses, telephone numbers, dates of birth, passwords, and security questions and answers.

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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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