Semaphor 12 hours ago

https://www.troyhunt.com/inside-the-synthient-threat-data/

Primary article instead of shitty forbes blog spam.

  • jcattle 12 hours ago

    So it is not a breach, but a collection of many sources.

    It is 183 million email (not gmail) addresses in the collection of which 14M haven't been seen before on have i been pwned.

    This hackernews title should be changed. (Currently: 183M Gmail Passwords Leaked)

larholm 12 hours ago

The title of the article makes it clear that these are not 183M Gmail passwords, but that Gmail passwords are a part of the leak.

"Gmail Passwords Confirmed As Part Of 183 Million Account Data Leak"

  • EForEndeavour 8 hours ago

    By the article's logic, I just exhaled 5 * 10^18 kg of carbon dioxide into the earth's atmosphere.

nomilk 12 hours ago

Some apps reset your password automatically (send you a password reset email) if they detect it has been leaked.

But email services appear to have a harder problem due to the catch 22 where you can't log in to reach the password reset email if they were to reset your password.

What do they do?

  • bfkwlfkjf 12 hours ago

    Maybe recovery email. Gmail once in a while asks me to set one up.

  • charcircuit 12 hours ago

    Ignoring the backup email case as the other commentor left. In practice accounts are not immediately compromised so there is enough time to send a reset to the original user.

    You could also do things like having the reset require the user to have a token that was issued before the compromise to prove you were able to authenticate before the leak happened.

comrade1234 12 hours ago

I skimmed the article. I skimmed several of the linked articles. No one says the source of the credentials, other than where people are buying and selling them. Where are google login credentials coming from? Malware I assume and nothing to do with a problem at google?

bfkwlfkjf 12 hours ago

Uh oh. For a long time I've been giving myself the excuse that the only reason why I keep using Gmail is security - Google has never had these kind of breaches.

The argument is no longer valid, time to move off Gmail.

  • jsnell 12 hours ago

    There was no breach, which is clear from the first sentence of the article.

    • Moru 11 hours ago

      If I understood the follow up blogpost right, it states that there is a lot of email adresses where the only hit is the email domain so they are filtering away that as false positives. Not all stolen credentials are properly aligned and encoded with ; on the correct place I guess :-)

      There might be a lot less gmail adresses showing up as pwned now.

blitzar 12 hours ago

sex, love, secret, and god

Those are mine