Security

MySpace sees 360m account details leaked

Usernames and passwords for more than 360 million MySpace accounts have been stolen from the social network and are being sold online, according to a breach database provider.

LeakedSource, which allows users to pay for subscriptions to its database of breached personal data, said the MySpace data was provided to it by one of its users.

The data set contains 360,213,024 records, with more than 111 million of the records containing a username and more than 68 million containing a secondary password, LeakedSource said.

According to the site, the passwords were stored using the SHA1 algorithm, which is considered relatively easy to decrypt, and didn’t use “salting”, a technique that involves the addition of random data to make decryption more difficult.

The methods MySpace used for storing passwords are not what internet standards propose,” LeakedSource said.

Only a few thousand of the passwords were over 10 characters in length, while almost none contained an upper-case character, according to the site. Some contained a “1” at the end, suggesting MySpace required passwords to contain a number, according to LeakedSource.

Popular passwords included “password1”, “abc123” and “123456”, the site found.

LinkedIn breach

Last week LeakedSource said it had obtained a copy of 117 million password records stolen from social network LinkedIn in 2012 and which were being offered for sale online.

LinkedIn said at the time that the breach had only affected about 6.5 million user accounts, and required a password reset for those accounts only, meaning that another 110.5 million accounts may still be vulnerable.

The business networking site said it was forcing a password reset for the affected accounts.

Following the latest LinkedIn incident, Microsoft last week forced users to upgrade their passwords, and banned the use of common credentials (such as “password”) across all its sites.

Such credentials have been banned on Hotmail since 2011.

Antony Savvas

York, UK-based Antony Savvas has been a technology journalist for 25 years and has expertise in all major areas of enterprise and consumer IT. He has worked for a number of leading technology magazines and websites and his work is syndicated across the internet. He also undertakes corporate work for some of the world's leading technology companies.

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Antony Savvas

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