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Found 7 results

  1. How to Get Massive Traffic from Youtube Top Comments This is a one on one coaching/training to teach you how to do youtube Top comments. After I coach you, you will be able to get top comments on videos with ONE MILLION views, TEN MILLION views etc.. You will then be able to grab up traffic from that video through your comment link, or send people back to your channel page. I'm not sure how long I'll even leave this open because I don't want the method to get too saturated. Salut, pret, $797 toate informatiile le-am pus intr-un pdf. Daca vrea cineva pdf-ul, 160 euro, plata paypal sau transfer bancar. astept pm.
  2. Hackers have pilfered and published the personal details and sexual preferences of 3.9 million users of hookup website Adult FriendFinder. Lusty lonely hearts, including those who asked for their account to be deleted, have been left in an awkward position after hackers broke into systems before uploading the details to the dark web. Email addresses, usernames, postcodes, dates of birth and IP addresses of 3.9 million members have been exposed. The UK's Channel 4 News, which came across the leak during a wider investigation into the dark web, broke the story of the FriendFinder breach on Thursday. Independent infosec bod Bev Robb penned a blog post about the leak in mid-April but did not name the hacked site. FriendFinder Networks admitted the breach had occurred and told Channel 4 that it had launched a "comprehensive investigation with the help of a leading third-party forensics expert". However, a warning to members is not as yet listed on the (NSFW) site itself, noted independent security expert Graham Cluley. Adult FriendFinder boasts 63 million users worldwide. Rob Norris, Fujitsu director of enterprise and cyber-security in UK and Ireland, noted that the breach was the latest in a long line of similar spills. "Another day, another data breach – this time FriendFinder is in the spotlight," Norris said. "Although this hack is looking to be resolved quickly, it once again highlights that it is no longer about prevention, but instead about accepting a data breach will occur and moving to a proactive approach which allows better preparation for dealing with today’s threats." He added: "The amount of data and confidential information transacted every day, coupled with the growth in reliance on digital services, means that any organisation is at risk – making most an easy target in the eyes of a cyber-criminal." Brian Honan, an infosec consultant who founded and heads up Ireland's Computer Security Incident Response Team, said that the latest leak posed a higher risk of harm than most. "I've always thought adult dating sites would be a perfect target for criminals to breach and use details for extortion," he said in a Twitter update. Source
  3. When a company is breached, the typical reaction is to increase security across the board. But Twitch, the Amazon-owned game streaming company, has decided to reduce the minimum number of characters in user passwords, thereby allowing users to have less secure logins, in response to customer complaints. The attack was announced yesterday on a company blog, whilst emails were also sent to concerned users. There’s little detail on the extent of the attack; Twitch simply said all user passwords were to be reset after it detected possible unauthorized access to some Twitch user account information. According to the email sent to users, some cryptographic protections were used on passwords, but it wasn’t clear how strong they were. And it said it was possible passwords could have been captured in plain text by malicious code when users logged into the site on 3 March. Various kinds of data could have been compromised, including credit card information, in particular card type, a truncated card number and the expiration date. Usernames and associated email addresses, passwords, the last IP address users logged in from, phone number, address and date of birth were also potentially stolen. With all that information, a hacker would have a good chance of stealing a victim’s identity. Users started to complain en masse across Twitch’s social networks, however. Some said they couldn’t remember their password, others said when they tried to change their passwords to anything less than 20 characters they weren’t allowed, due to the site’s restrictions. Texan Twitch customer Corbin Ellis told the company on their Facebook page that “if users want to use bad passwords, that’s their problem, not yours”. Twitch caved to customer demands, announcing it would reduce the limit on minimum password length to eight characters minimum. Web security expert Troy Hunt told FORBES more than eight was surprisingly restrictive. “But what’s disheartening about this is that users have apparently baulked at creating passwords longer than eight characters so are clearly not getting the message on what constitutes a strong ‘secret’.” Authentication expert Per Thorsheim said it didn’t make sense to lower the length requirement after a breach. “I’d say on the contrary in many cases. In this specific case they have dramatically lowered their requirements. From a security perspective this could be justified by new and better ways of sending, [encrypting] and storing your passwords.” If any more evidence was needed that the username-password paradigm is a flawed form of authentication, the Twitch breach has provided. sursa: Amazon's Twitch Hacked, Caves To Angry User Demands For Less Secure Passwords - Forbes si-au cam luat la mumu twitch...
  4. Fara PM ... Nu vand ! Link : https://www.sendspace.com/file/nmcnoh Sunt gasite pe un RDP
  5. More than one million websites that run on the WordPress content management application run the risk of being completely hijacked by attackers exploiting critical vulnerability in most versions of a plugin called WP-Slimstat. Versions prior to the recently released Slimstat 3.9.6 contain a readily guessable key that's used to sign data sent to and from visiting end-user computers, according to a blog post published Tuesday by Web security firm Sucuri. The result is a SQL injection vector that can be used to extract highly sensitive data, including encrypted passwords and the encryption keys used to remotely administer websites. "If your website uses a vulnerable version of the plugin, you’re at risk," Marc-Alexandre Montpas, a senior vulnerability researcher at Sucuri, wrote. "Successful exploitation of this bug could lead to Blind SQL Injection attacks, which means an attacker could grab sensitive information from your database, including username, (hashed) passwords and, in certain configurations, WordPress Secret Keys (which could result in a total site takeover)." The WP-Slimstat secret key is nothing more than the MD5 hash of the plugin’s installation timestamp. An attacker could use the Internet Archive or similar sites to determine the year a vulnerable site was put online. That would leave an attacker with about 30 million values to test, an undertaking that could be completed in about 10 minutes. Once the secret key has been divined, the attacker can use it to pull data out of the database. WP-Slimstat is an analytics tool. Its listing on WordPress shows it has been downloaded more than 1.3 million times. People who operate websites that use the plugin should update immediately. Post updated to change headline. It previously read: More than1 million WordPress websites imperiled by critical plugin bug. Source
  6. magnet link sursa: https://xato.net/passwords/ten-million-passwords/
  7. Topface, one of the world's largest dating websites, said it has paid a hacker an undisclosed sum to stop trying to sell about 20 million email addresses stolen from the Russian company. Topface Chief Executive Dmitry Filatov said the company located the hacker, who had published ads to sell the data but had not actually sold them. "We have paid him an award for finding a vulnerability and agreed on further cooperation in the field of data security," Filatov said in an email on Friday, declining to disclose the size of the reward. Topface says it has some 92 million users and 1.6 million daily visitors. Cybersecurity experts typically advise companies not to pay hackers to return stolen data, calling that a ransom and saying cybercriminals often break promises. But Filatov noted that the ads have already been removed and Topface has agreed not to pursue charges against the unidentified individual. "As we made an agreement with him we do not see any reason for him to break it," said Filatov. Atlanta-based fraud protection firm Easy Solutions disclosed the hack on Sunday, reporting on its blog that a hacker known as "Mastermind" was attempting to sell 20 million credentials from an unnamed dating site. Only email address had been stolen, Filatov said. "There was no access to other information - neither passwords, nor content of the accounts." Source
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