![]() Here are some of the tweets where gamers are showing their anger over the breach and poor security from LifeBoat. Lifeboat at the other hand asked users to reset their passwords without informing them about the breach and that their personal data has been stolen but gamers on the social media aren’t happy with the company’s decision. Hunt believes that the Lifeboat servers had poor security and passwords were weakly hashed using an MD5 algorithm which allowed hackers to simply decrypt the passwords by Googling them. Hunt is the same researcher who earlier found data of 1.1 Million users from Beautiful People dating site and 4.8 million kids data from Toy Manufacture VTech. ”When this happened early January we figured the best thing for our players was to quietly force a password reset without letting the hackers know they had limited time to act. If they alerted people about passwords being reset they would’ve basically been telling the hackers to hurry up and ALL data would’ve been stolen,” according to a statement released by LifeBoat. LifeBoat didn’t inform users until a security researcher found out the data An important fact about the breach is that it took place in 2015 but the company decided to hide it from the users, however, the security researcher Troy Hunt got hold of the list of affected users along with the data, reports the BBC. The stolen data includes personal information of gamers including their login emails and passwords. The data is now available for sale on Dark Weband Lifeboat has confirmed the breach. ![]() Lifeboat, a platform that provides gamers with an option to run servers for playing customised and multiplayer version of Minecraft has been hacked and login details of seven million users have been stolen. Minecraft users have to change their passwords ASAP because Lifeboat company didn’t disclose about the data breach that took place in early 2015. ![]()
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