Attack on Yahoo hit 500 million users

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Yahoo says hackers stole information from about 500 million users in 2014 in what appears to be the largest publicly disclosed cyber-breach in history.

The breach included swathes of personal information including names and emails as well as “unencrypted security questions and answers”.

It did not include any credit card data, the site said, adding it believed the attack was state-sponsored.

In July, Yahoo was sold to US telecoms giant Verizon for $4.8bn (£3.7bn).

The FBI has confirmed it is investigating the attack.

Password change urged

News of a possible major attack on the technology firm emerged in August when a hacker known as “Peace” was apparently attempting to sell information on 200 million Yahoo accounts.

Yahoo on Thursday confirmed the breach was far bigger than first thought.

The data taken includes names, email addresses, telephone numbers, dates of birth and encrypted passwords.

Yahoo recommended all users should change their passwords if they had not done so since 2014.

Verizon told the BBC it had learned of the hack “within the last two days” and said it had “limited information”.

The company added: “We will evaluate as the investigation continues through the lens of overall Verizon interests, including consumers, customers, shareholders and related communities.

“Until then, we are not in position to further comment.”

YahooImage copyrightYAHOO
Image captionYahoo published details of the breach on its Tumblr blogging site

Yahoo said in a statement: “Online intrusions and thefts by state-sponsored actors have become increasingly common across the technology industry.”

Reuters reported three unnamed US intelligence officials as saying they believed the attack was state-sponsored because it was similar to previous hacks linked to Russian intelligence agencies.

Nikki Parker, vice-president at security company Covata, said: “Yahoo is likely to come under intense scrutiny from regulators, the media and public and rightly so. Corporations can’t shy away from data breaches and they must hold their hands up and show that they are committed to resolving the problem.”

She added: “Let’s hope the ink is dry on the contract with Verizon.”

Questions are being asked about the length of time it took Yahoo to fully acknowledge the breach.

“It is really worrying that a breach from 2014 can have gone undetected for so long,” said Prof Alan Woodward from the University of Surrey.

“It is also surprising the public statement took so long to appear.


Top 10 previous breaches

  • MySpace accounts – 359m
  • LinkedIn accounts – 164m
  • Adobe accounts – 152m
  • Badoo accounts – 112m
  • VK accounts – 93m
  • Dropbox accounts – 68m
  • tumblr accounts – 65m
  • iMesh accounts – 49m
  • Fling accounts – 40m
  • Last.fm accounts – 37m

Source – haveibeenpawned.com


“I would have thought most companies had learned by now that early disclosure is better, even if you have to revise and update as you learn more.

“I can understand a few days delay to confirm the breach is genuine as fake data dumps are increasingly common, but six weeks seems rather too long.”

The scale of the hack eclipses other recent, major tech breaches – such as MySpace (359 million), LinkedIn (164 million) and Adobe (152 million).

Yahoo was founded in 1994 by Jerry Yang and David Filo and in its first decade was a pioneer of internet services.

It was once the most popular website in the US and the company was worth about $125bn, but Yahoo lost ground towards the end of the first decade of the century, leading to its purchase by Verizon.

Verizon’s motivation for purchasing the struggling Yahoo was to simply gain its massive user base.

More than a billion people visit a Yahoo-owned site every month, and Verizon was hoping to use that to sell targeted advertising.


Yahoo net income

Yahoo Timeline

  • 1994 Yahoo – which stands for Yet Another Hierarchically Organized Oracle – is founded
  • 2000 Yahoo valued at $125bn at height of dot.com boom
  • 2002 Google rejects a $3bn bid from Yahoo
  • 2008 Microsoft’s $44.6bn offer for Yahoo is turned down
  • 2013 Blogging site Tumblr acquired by Yahoo for $1.1bn
  • 2015 Yahoo makes net loss of $4.4bn
  • 2016 Verizon agrees $4.8bn deal to buy Yahoo

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