The Standard (St. Catharines)

Hackers stole 500M Yahoo user accounts

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SAN FRANCISCO — Yahoo said hackers stole personal informatio­n from 500 million of its user accounts, a massive security breakdown it attributed to a “state sponsored actor.” The breach, disclosed Thursday, the latest setback for the beleaguere­d Internet company, dates back to late 2014.

That’s when high-tech thieves hacked into Yahoo’s data centres, the company said. But Yahoo only recently discovered the break-in as part of an ongoing internal investigat­ion.

The stolen data includes users’ names, email addresses, telephone numbers, birth dates, hashed passwords, and the security questions — and answers — used to verify an account holder’s identity.

Last month, the tech site Motherboar­d reported that a hacker who uses the name “Peace” boasted that he had account informatio­n belonging to 200 million Yahoo users and was trying to sell the data on the web.

Yahoo recommends that users change their passwords if they haven’t done so since 2014. The company said its investigat­ion so far hasn’t found any evidence that informatio­n about users’ bank accounts or credit and debit cards were swiped in the hacking attack. It said it has “no evidence” that the attacker is still in Yahoo’s network.

News of the security lapse could cause some people to have second thoughts about relying on Yahoo’s services, raising a prickly issue for the company as it tries to sell its digital operations to Verizon for US$4.8 billion. That deal, announced two months ago, isn’t supposed to close until early next year. That leaves Verizon with wiggle room to renegotiat­e the purchase price or even back out if it believes the security breach will harm Yahoo’s business. That could happen if users shun Yahoo or file lawsuits because they’re incensed by the theft of their personal informatio­n. — The Associated Press

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