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Sombeech
12-04-2013, 06:14 PM
A computer security researcher has stumbled upon another huge file of stolen user names and passwords that was posted on the 'net for other hackers to enjoy.Daniel Chechik, and his fellow researchers at Trustwave SpiderLabs, (http://blog.spiderlabs.com/2013/12/look-what-i-found-moar-pony.html?utm_source=dlvr.it&utm_medium=twitter) found a cache of user names and passwords for 2 million accounts that gives hackers access to accounts on popular websites like Facebook, Google, Yahoo, Twitter, LinkedIn, and others.
This stash of 2 million passwords follows a massive hack on Adobe revealed in October in which a jaw-dropping 38 million user accounts and passwords were nabbed (http://www.businessinsider.com/hackers-take-38-million-adobe-passwords-2013-10) and posted to the 'net. That attack was so big that other website vendors were affected, because many people use the same user name and password for all of their websites. Website vendors like Facebook and Evernote sifted through hacked passwords, found accounts using the hacked user/password combo and forced those people to change their passwords.
Evernote even went so far as to blame Adobe by name (http://www.businessinsider.com/evernote-blames-adobe-for-password-hack-2013-11) as the reason why it was forcing Evernote users to change their passwords.
One thing learned from all these lists of stolen passwords is how many people use the same easy-to-guess passwords.
Here are the 25 most popular passwords in the hands of hackers, reported by BBC News (http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/technology-24821528) and SpiderLabs. If you recognize your favorite password here, it's really time to pick something else.


123456
123456789
password
admin
12345678
qwerty
1234567
111111
photoshop
123123
1234567890
000000
abc123
1234
adobe1
macromedia
azerty
iloveyou
aaaaaa
654321



Read more: http://www.businessinsider.com/2-million-more-passwords-stolen-2013-12#ixzz2mYyPdaFF

Sombeech
12-04-2013, 06:17 PM
Interesting. I just logged into facebook and I was alerted there has been suspicious activity on my account and to change my password.

I've also got it setup to receive a confirmation code via text whenever an unrecognized browser is used to login to my account.