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Ryan Naraine, Emil Protalinski and Dancho Danchev

Comcast responds to passwords leak on Scribd

By | March 17, 2009, 12:28pm PDT

Summary: Comcast has responded to the recently found list of passwords hosted at the popular social publishing site Scribd. Originally claimed to be a list consisting of 8000 passwords for Comcast customers, the company now states that not only are 4000 of the passwords duplicates, but also, that only 700 of them belong to active Comcast [...]

Comcast has responded to the recently found list of passwords hosted at the popular social publishing site Scribd. Originally claimed to be a list consisting of 8000 passwords for Comcast customers, the company now states that not only are 4000 of the passwords duplicates, but also, that only 700 of them belong to active Comcast customers.

Perhaps the result of a phishing campaign that apparently took place a long time ago, this incident highlights several important issues. For instance, the professor at Wilkes University that originally came across the list — copies of it are still available online — is disturbed by the fact that he’s using this very same leaked password everywhere else - “That isn’t just my password for Comcast, it’s my password for everything that is not tied to my credit card,”. Bad password management practices are clearly in place, but how relevant are these best practices in a situation where the host is already compromised by malicious software? A rhetorical question.

In a recently released Gartner document entitled “Consumers Don’t Want to Change the Ways They Manage Online Passwords” the analysts try to raise awareness on the fact that users continue using the same (weak) passwords across different web sites. And whereas the document is reasonably emphasizing on the well known insecure practice, it excludes a simple truth - that a password’s strength and diversity of different passwords across web sites, becomes irrelevant practice once a host gets compromised.

Comcast is in a process of notifying the affected customers. Looks like phishing as usual, with an odd choice for hosting the collected data on behalf of the campaigners.

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Dancho Danchev is an independent security consultant and cyber threats analyst, with extensive experience in open source intelligence gathering, malware and cybercrime incident response.

Disclosure

Dancho Danchev

More details on Dancho Danchev's current and past professional affiliations, can be found in his LinkedIn profile.

Biography

Dancho Danchev

Dancho Danchev is an independent security consultant and cyber threats analyst, with extensive experience in open source intelligence gathering, and cybercrime incident response. He's been an active security blogger since 2007, and maintains a popular security blog sharing real-time threats intelligence data with the rest of the community on a daily basis. More details on Dancho Danchev's current and past professional affiliations, can be found in his LinkedIn profile. You can also follow him on Twitter
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RE: Comcast responds to passwords leak on Scribd
lovedong 13th Sep
I hope this article will be better. replica hermes bags
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Comcast can slow your net speed down so it has the ability to function at a higher level than you can.This could even mean going right into your BIOS or CPU.I think that Comcast might even be Serbia.
I hope this article will be better. replica hermes bags
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"That isn?t just my password for Comcast, it?s my password for everything"

The only thing worse than using the same password for everything is publicly revealing that you do.
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RE: Comcast responds to passwords leak on Scribd
birumut Updated - 3rd May 2011
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