Timehop Releases New Details About July 4 Breach
July 16 2018Timehop, the company that specializes in “digital nostalgia,” is releasing more information on the July 4 breach that compromised millions of users’ personally identifiable information (PII). New details include the timeline of the attack, the information affected, and the steps the company has taken to remediate the issue and prevent its recurrence.
When Timehop first announced the breach, it revealed that the names and email addresses belonging to some 21 million users were illegally accessed, along with phone numbers belonging to about 22%, or 4.7 million of them. Now Timehop has released the total numbers of accounts that provided some combination of name, email address, date of birth, phone number, and gender designation to the attacker or attackers.
The company has also provided details of the authentication issue that led to the breach: It says that the account used to access the data did not have two-factor authentication enabled. Timehop now says it has required multifactor authentication on all such accounts.
Timehop has provided great transparency into the attack, its effects, and the steps being taken in its aftermath. While all customers will have to reauthenticate the service to their social media accounts (a result of authentication tokens being compromised), customers are also encouraged to learn about what happened to understand how they might be affected.
Read more here.
Black Hat USA returns to Las Vegas with hands-on technical Trainings, cutting-edge Briefings, Arsenal open-source tool demonstrations, top-tier security solutions and service providers in the Business Hall. Click for information on the conference and to register.
Dark Reading’s Quick Hits delivers a brief synopsis and summary of the significance of breaking news events. For more information from the original source of the news item, please follow the link provided in this article. View Full Bio
Timehop Releases New Details About July 4 Breach
July 16 2018Timehop, the company that specializes in “digital nostalgia,” is releasing more information on the July 4 breach that compromised millions of users’ personally identifiable information (PII). New details include the timeline of the attack, the information affected, and the steps the company has taken to remediate the issue and prevent its recurrence.
When Timehop first announced the breach, it revealed that the names and email addresses belonging to some 21 million users were illegally accessed, along with phone numbers belonging to about 22%, or 4.7 million of them. Now Timehop has released the total numbers of accounts that provided some combination of name, email address, date of birth, phone number, and gender designation to the attacker or attackers.
The company has also provided details of the authentication issue that led to the breach: It says that the account used to access the data did not have two-factor authentication enabled. Timehop now says it has required multifactor authentication on all such accounts.
Timehop has provided great transparency into the attack, its effects, and the steps being taken in its aftermath. While all customers will have to reauthenticate the service to their social media accounts (a result of authentication tokens being compromised), customers are also encouraged to learn about what happened to understand how they might be affected.
Read more here.
Black Hat USA returns to Las Vegas with hands-on technical Trainings, cutting-edge Briefings, Arsenal open-source tool demonstrations, top-tier security solutions and service providers in the Business Hall. Click for information on the conference and to register.
Dark Reading’s Quick Hits delivers a brief synopsis and summary of the significance of breaking news events. For more information from the original source of the news item, please follow the link provided in this article. View Full Bio