Hacker who stole over 600 mn user records strikes again, steals 127 mn records more

As per a Tech Crunch report, the hacker has stolen these records from eight websites including Ixigo, YouNow, Coinmama, Petflow, among others.
Hacker who stole over 600 mn user records strikes again, steals 127 mn records more
Hacker who stole over 600 mn user records strikes again, steals 127 mn records more
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A hacker who stole close to 620 million user records from 16 websites has struck again, this time breaking into 127 million more records from eight more websites.

According to a TechCrunch report late on Thursday, the hacker now has 18 million user records from travel booking site Ixigo and 40 million from live-video streaming site YouNow.

"Houzz, which recently disclosed a data breach, is listed with 57 million records stolen and Ge.tt had 1.8 million accounts stolen," said the report.

The list also includes Ge.tt, which had 1.8 million accounts stolen, 450,000 records from cryptocurrency site Coinmama, 4 million records from Roll20, a gaming site, 5 million records from Stronghold Kingdoms, a multiplayer online game and 1 million records from pet care delivery service PetFlow

According to the hacker's listings, Ixigo used an outdated "MD5" hashing algorithm to scramble passwords, which these days is easy to unscramble. 

"YouNow doesn't store passwords," a spokesperson was quoted as saying.

Earlier, the same hacker claimed he had user records from several major sites like more than 151 million records from MyFitnessPal and 25 million records from Animoto. 

It has been claimed that databases, which are aimed at making "life easier" for hackers, can be purchased from the Dream Market cyber-souk, located in the Tor network, for less than $20,000 in bitcoin. 

The stolen information mainly includes account holders' names, email addresses and passwords, according to the report that appeared this week.

The price appears to be relatively cheap because the information is targeted at spammers and credential stuffers who could use the information to also get access to other sites for which the users use the same usernames and passwords.

While some of these websites - particularly MyHeritage, MyFitnessPal and Animoto - warned their customers last year that they had been compromised, several others have started notifying users about the hacks.

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