Yahoo is expected to confirm this week what Recode describes as a “widespread and serious” data breach affecting an estimated 200 million users. In light of this news, IT security experts commented below.
Peter Galvin, Vice President of Strategy at Thales e-Security:
As data breaches of this scale continue to hit the headlines, it is critical that businesses change the way they think about data protection, and broaden their mind-set beyond the classic definition of what data is considered to be sensitive. It’s never been more critical for businesses to extend robust encryption policies to cover all personally identifiable information of customers so that the data is rendered unreadable and worthless to those with malicious intent.”
Kunal Anand, CTO at Prevoty:
Bert Rankin, CMO at Lastline:
Brad Bussie, CISSP, Director of Product Management at STEALTHbits Technologies:
“So again, what is the value of the breached accounts to the dark web and hacker community? The true value comes from the ability for attackers to socially engineer attacks specifically targeting breached victims. They have personal identifiable information most of the time, such as names, address, phone numbers, and email addresses. Some breaches have even included question and answer profiles for “I forgot my password” which can quickly allow an attacker to compromise victims’ email accounts. We may not realize it, but when an attacker gains control of your email, they in essence own your identity. The attacker that buys the breached credentials will dictate what level of mischief or flat out criminal activity that will ensue. Keep in mind, some attackers will design spoofing attacks to try and get at higher profile information within an organization, while others will directly attack other websites looking for the same username/password combination they obtained from the breach. The bottom line here is: if you have a current Yahoo account or have ever had a Yahoo account; change all of your passwords – pronto.”
Mark Wilson, Product Management Director at STEALTHbits Technologies:
“Credentials are the mechanism to gain access to the data, and data because it has value. Therefore, it makes sense that organizations that hold vast amounts of credentials, such as Yahoo, are prime targets. Even if only 1% of the compromised credentials have access to data of any value, that’s still a full 2 million accounts worth of data.
“The breached credentials will provide access to data that likely contains personally identifiable information. This will allow the perpetrator access to bank accounts, credit facilities, maybe even private content such as we have seen with ‘celebrity’ home movies. All data that bad actors are prepared to pay large sums for.
“If you think about it, personal data may often have a larger dollar value than many businesses do.”