Tuesday, April 8, 2014

All or some passwords vulnerable after security flaw found on Internet

Passwords vulnerable after security flaw found

Washington Post - ‎22 minutes ago‎
NEW YORK - Passwords, credit cards and other sensitive data are at risk after security researchers discovered a problem with an encryption technology used to securely transmit email, e-commerce transactions, social networking posts and other Web traffic.
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Portal:Current events/2014 April 7

Passwords vulnerable after security flaw found


NEW YORK — Passwords, credit cards and other sensitive data are at risk after security researchers discovered a problem with an encryption technology used to securely transmit email, e-commerce transactions, social networking posts and other Web traffic.
Security researchers say the threat, known as Heartbleed, is serious, partly because it remained undiscovered for more two years. Attackers can exploit the vulnerability without leaving any trace, so anything sent during that time has potentially been compromised. It’s not known, though, whether anyone has actually used it to conduct an attack.
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Researchers are advising people to change all of their passwords.
The flaw was discovered independently in recent days by researchers at Google Inc. and the Finnish security firm Codenomicon.
The breach involves SSL/TLS, an encryption technology marked by the small, closed padlock and “https:” on Web browsers to signify that traffic is secure. With the Heartbleed flaw, traffic was subject to snooping even if the padlock had been closed.
The problem affects only the variant of SSL/TLS known as OpenSSL, but that happens to be one of the most common on the Internet.
Researchers at Codenomicon say that OpenSSL is used by two of the most widely used Web server software, Apache and nginx. That means many websites potentially have this security flaw. OpenSSL is also used to secure email, chats and virtual private networks, which are used by employees to connect securely with corporate networks.
Despite the worries, Codenomicon said many large consumer sites don’t have the problem because of their “conservative choice” of equipment and software. “Ironically smaller and more progressive services or those who have upgraded to (the) latest and best encryption will be affected most,” the security firm added.
A fix came out Monday, but affected websites and service providers must install the update.
Yahoo’s Tumblr blogging service uses OpenSSL. In a blog post Tuesday, officials at the service said they had no evidence of any breach and had immediately implemented the fix.
“But this still means that the little lock icon (HTTPS) we all trusted to keep our passwords, personal emails, and credit cards safe, was actually making all that private information accessible to anyone who knew about the exploit,” Tumblr’s blog post read. “This might be a good day to call in sick and take some time to change your passwords everywhere — especially your high-security services like email, file storage, and banking, which may have been compromised by this bug.”
Yahoo Inc. said its other services, including email, Flickr and search, also have the vulnerability. The company said some of the systems have already been fixed, while work is being done on the rest of Yahoo’s websites.
The company reiterated its standard recommendation for people to change passwords regularly and to add a backup mobile number to the account. That number can be used to verify a user’s identity if there are problems accessing the account because of hacking.
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AP Technology Writer Michael Liedtke in San Francisco contributed to this report.
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Online:
http://heartbleed.com
http://www.kb.cert.org/vuls/id/720951
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Passwords vulnerable after security flaw found

Did the Internet in regard to doing business just become partly or completely disfunctional? 

I was thinking that this likely was discovered in relation to what happened at Target Stores as technicians were sort of reverse engineering what happened and tracing back to the source wherever possible. 

However, as a programmer in the 1960s and 1970s I could have told anyone that asked that back doors put their by programmers are everywhere all around the world and always have been. This is one reason why I won't file taxes online and things like that ever. Anything you put online might be looked at by literally hundreds or thousands of people. If that isn't okay with you then maybe you shouldn't be putting those things online anyway. And texting on phones is even worse security wise as well as any cell phone calls worldwide.

These kinds of security flaws might kill business on the Internet eventually worldwide.

 


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