Difference between revisions of "DBSA:2016-05271"

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(Created page with "{{DBSAHEAD | TITLE=MySpace Compromise (Unconfirmed) | KEYWORDS=MySpace, compromise, passwords, email addresses, unsalted }} '''DBSA ID:''' {{PAGENAME}} '''Regarding:''' MySp...")
 
 
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{{DBSAHEAD
 
{{DBSAHEAD
| TITLE=MySpace Compromise (Unconfirmed)
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| TITLE=MySpace Compromise
 
| KEYWORDS=MySpace, compromise, passwords, email addresses, unsalted
 
| KEYWORDS=MySpace, compromise, passwords, email addresses, unsalted
 
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'''DBSA ID:''' {{PAGENAME}}
 
'''DBSA ID:''' {{PAGENAME}}
  
'''Regarding:''' MySpace Compromise (Unconfirmed)
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'''Regarding:''' MySpace Compromise
  
 
'''Writeup:''' [[User:Kradorex Xeron|Kradorex Xeron]] ([[User talk:Kradorex Xeron|talk]]) 17:25, 27 May 2016 (EDT)
 
'''Writeup:''' [[User:Kradorex Xeron|Kradorex Xeron]] ([[User talk:Kradorex Xeron|talk]]) 17:25, 27 May 2016 (EDT)
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==Description==
 
==Description==
MySpace is a social networking platform website created for users to communicate, recent iterations of the website have been targeted toward the independent music scene. On 27 May 2016 it has been reported that the backend database of the site had been compromised and analyzed by the attackers who indicate 427 million records are in their posession. Records contain usernames, hashed passwords that are not salted (making it easy to use a rainbow table attack).
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MySpace is a social networking platform website created for users to communicate, recent iterations of the website have been targeted toward the independent music scene. On 27 May 2016 it has been reported that the backend database of the site had been compromised and analyzed by the attackers who indicate 427 million records are in their posession. Records contain usernames, hashed passwords that are not salted (making it easy to use a rainbow table attack) and email addresses.
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Digibase has not directly observed the compromised records, so this is unconfirmed at this point in time, but users should deploy standard methodologies.
  
 
==Mitigation/Solution==
 
==Mitigation/Solution==
Users should change their Myspace passwords on a rolling basis to temporary passwords, once immediately and then again at 2 weeks. After which users may reset to a more longterm password. Users should also ensure that their password is not shared among other sites, to which those passwords will also need to be reset.
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Users should change their Myspace passwords on a rolling basis to temporary passwords, once immediately and then again at 1 weeks. After 2 weeks users may reset to a more longterm password. Users should also ensure that their password is not shared among other sites, to which those passwords will also need to be reset.
  
 
Users should also be highly suspicious of any contacts via email and use non-email methods to verify legitimacy of such email. Password resets should only be performed through known good links.
 
Users should also be highly suspicious of any contacts via email and use non-email methods to verify legitimacy of such email. Password resets should only be performed through known good links.

Latest revision as of 17:27, 27 May 2016

Disclaimer: as technology changes, advisories may become out of date or may no longer be relevant, please refer to the "Date" section of the header to be sure the advisory is recent as pertains to your situation.

Digibase Security Advisory - MySpace Compromise

Keywords: MySpace, compromise, passwords, email addresses, unsalted

DBSA ID: 2016-05271

Regarding: MySpace Compromise

Writeup: Kradorex Xeron (talk) 17:25, 27 May 2016 (EDT)

Date: 2016 05 27

Last Modified: 20160527172739 by Kradorex Xeron

Who should take note: All MySpace Users

Classification

Priority: MODERATE

Rationale: Users need to ensure their information is secured.

Severity: HIGH

Rationale: Usernames, insecurely hashed passwords, email addresses among other information has reportedly been compromised

Spread of Issue: SINGLE-PLATFORM HIGH

Rationale: 427 Million records are reported to have been compromised

Description

MySpace is a social networking platform website created for users to communicate, recent iterations of the website have been targeted toward the independent music scene. On 27 May 2016 it has been reported that the backend database of the site had been compromised and analyzed by the attackers who indicate 427 million records are in their posession. Records contain usernames, hashed passwords that are not salted (making it easy to use a rainbow table attack) and email addresses.

Digibase has not directly observed the compromised records, so this is unconfirmed at this point in time, but users should deploy standard methodologies.

Mitigation/Solution

Users should change their Myspace passwords on a rolling basis to temporary passwords, once immediately and then again at 1 weeks. After 2 weeks users may reset to a more longterm password. Users should also ensure that their password is not shared among other sites, to which those passwords will also need to be reset.

Users should also be highly suspicious of any contacts via email and use non-email methods to verify legitimacy of such email. Password resets should only be performed through known good links.

References