Earlier today, AOL posted an update on last week's spoofing incident with its email service. In case you hadn't heard, AOL Mail was hacked a few days ago and accounts were spoofed, sending out spam messages to the affected users' contact list. In a blog post, the company says that the breach only hit "roughly 2 percent" of its 20+ million accounts. The bad news? AOL says that the unauthorized access allowed the hackers to peek at mailing addresses, contact lists, encrypted passwords, encrypted answers to security questions and "certain employee information." While that's pretty awful, the outfit claims that "there is no indication" that the encryption had been broken or that any financial info was nabbed. As you might expect, AOL recomments all users and employed reset their passwords and security queries for any of its services while it continues the investigation.
Disclosure: Engadget is owned by AOL.
[Image credit: Justin Sullivan/Getty Images]
Filed under: Internet
Source: AOL
from Engadget Full RSS Feed http://ift.tt/1mS9UOY
via
Blogger Comment