The Sunday Guardian

Stacks of email data compromise­d in the biggest leak in internet history

- ANDREW GRIFFIN

Hundreds of millions of email addresses and some passwords have been leaked onto the internet, in probably the biggest dump ever.

A broken spambot has made the details available on the internet, potentiall­y endangerin­g anyone contained within it. And it also includes passwords, meaning that some people’s accounts may now be compromise­d.

But despite the fact that 711 million addresses are contained within the dump— enough to give one each for every man, woman and child in Europe—it’s unlikely that each belongs to a real person. The true number of real people is likely to be much smaller, because the dump contains a range of fake and repeated addresses, said Troy Hunt, the security researcher who made the breach public.

All of the emails were collected by people running a spambot, which sends out emails en masse to people in the hope that they’ll be tricked into clicking onto them and giving up money. They were storing those addresses on an email server that wasn’t properly secured, meaning that other people could simply drop in and download them all.

As well as the addresses, the dump also contains millions of passwords for some of those same email addresses. But Mr Hunt, who runs the website Have I Been Pwned, said that they appeared to have been taken from other password dumps, like that from LinkedIn, meaning that most people were already exposed to those security problems.

There’s no way of knowing where the data, which is probably compiled from a variety of sources, actually came from. The dump includes a range of addresses from different sources, many of which are fake but some of which are entirely real.

That diversity “illustrate­s how broad the sources of data inevitably are; finding yourself in this data set un- fortunatel­y doesn’t give you much insight into where your email address was obtained from nor what you can actually do about it,” Mr Hunt wrote in his blog post.

“I have no idea how this service got mine, but even for me with all the data I see doing what I do, there was still a moment where I went ‘ah, this helps explain all the spam I get’,” he continued.

“And that’s the unfortunat­e reality for all of us: our email addresses are a simple commodity that’s shared and traded with reckless abandon, used by unscrupulo­us parties to bombard us with everything from Viagra offers to promises of Nigerian prince wealth. That, unfortunat­ely, is life on the web today.” THE INDEPENDEN­T

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India