Massive password breach exposes 149 million stolen credentials online, including 48 million Gmail accounts. Learn what happened and protect yourself.
Are your Gmail login credentials amongst the 48 million estimated as exposed in this leak of existing infostealer logs — here's what you need to know.
More than 149 million passwords were exposed in an unsecured database, including logins for social media, streaming services, ...
This “dream wish list for criminals” includes millions of Gmail, Facebook, banking logins, and more. The researcher who ...
A massive unsecured database exposed 149 million logins, raising concerns over infostealer malware and credential theft.
Security researchers have discovered what appears to be the largest password leak of all time, containing around 10 billion unique, plain text passwords. The file, titled "rockyou2024.txt," was posted ...
Forbes contributors publish independent expert analyses and insights. Davey Winder is a veteran cybersecurity writer, hacker and analyst. Updated July 8 with details ...
Jeremiah Fowler uncovered a huge database of credentials spanning financial services, banking, social media, and dating apps without password or encryption protection.
Jake Peterson is Lifehacker’s Tech Editor, and has been covering tech news and how-tos for nearly a decade. His team covers all things technology, including AI, smartphones, computers, game consoles, ...
Our department currently stores all passwords (service accounts, admin accounts, etc..) in a word document on a file server that has NTFS permissions in place to restrict access. The security of this ...
Oracle engineers have corrected the problem in version Oracle Database 12, but they have no plans to fix it in version 11.1 Click to expand... That's a bit troubling. Between the results of their suit ...