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Once seen as bulletproof, 11 million+ Ashley Madison passwords already cracked

Posted on September 10, 2015 by Dissent

Dan Goodin reports:

When the Ashley Madison hackers leaked close to 100 gigabytes’ worth of sensitive documents belonging to the online dating service for people cheating on their romantic partners, there seemed to be one saving grace. User passwords were cryptographically protected using bcrypt, an algorithm so slow and computationally demanding it would literally take centuries to crack all 36 million of them

Security researcher could only crack weak passwords—just 0.0668% of trove.

Now, a crew of hobbyist crackers has uncovered programming errors that make more than 15 million of the Ashley Madison account passcodes orders of magnitude faster to crack. The blunders are so monumental that the researchers have already deciphered more than 11 million of the passwords in the past 10 days.

Read more on Ars Technica.

Related posts:

  • Ashley Madison investigation by Canada and Australia results in compliance agreement
  • AshleyMadison data dumped (Update 3)
Category: Business SectorHackNon-U.S.Of Note

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