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Now it’s easy to see if leaked passwords work on other sites

Posted on July 11, 2016 by Dan Goodin

(credit: Wikimedia)

Over the past few months, a cluster of megabreaches has dumped account credentials for a mind-boggling 642 million accounts into the public domain, where they can then be used to compromise other accounts that are protected by the same password. Now, there’s software that can streamline this vicious cycle by testing for reused passcodes on Facebook and other popular sites.

Shard, as the command-line tool has been dubbed, is designed to allow end users to test if a password they use for one site is also used on Facebook, LinkedIn, Reddit, Twitter, or Instagram, its creator, Philip O’Keefe, told Ars. The security researcher said he developed the tool after discovering that the randomly generated eight-character password protecting several of his accounts was among the more than 177 million LinkedIn passwords that were leaked in May.

“I used that password as a general password for many services,” he wrote in an e-mail. “It was a pain to remember which sites it was shared and to change them all. I use a password manager now.”

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This entry was posted in account credentials, Data Breaches, Law & Disorder, Risk Assessment, Technology Lab by Dan Goodin. Bookmark the permalink.

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