LastPass Admits to Severe Data Breach, Encrypted Password Vaults Stolen

Maxxam

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Password manager giant LastPass has confirmed that cybercriminals stole its customers’ encrypted password vaults, which store its customers’ passwords and other secrets, in a data breach earlier this year.

In an updated blog post on its disclosure, LastPass CEO Karim Toubba said the intruders took a copy of a backup of customer vault data by using cloud storage keys stolen from a LastPass employee. The cache of customer password vaults is stored in a “proprietary binary format” that contains both unencrypted and encrypted vault data, but technical and security details of this proprietary format weren’t specified. The unencrypted data includes vault-stored web addresses, but LastPass does not say more or in what context. It’s not clear how recent the stolen backups are.

LastPass said customers’ password vaults are encrypted and can only be unlocked with the customers’ master password, which is only known to the customer. But the company warned that the cybercriminals behind the intrusion “may attempt to use brute force to guess your master password and decrypt the copies of vault data they took.”

Toubba said that the cybercriminals also took vast reams of customer data, including names, email addresses, phone numbers and some billing information.
Password managers are overwhelmingly a good thing to use for storing your passwords, which should all be long, complex and unique to each site or service. But security incidents like this are a reminder that not all password managers are created equal and can be attacked, or compromised, in different ways. Given that everyone’s threat model is different, no one person will have the same requirements as the other.

In a rare shituation (not a typo) like this — which we spelled out in our parsing of LastPass’s data breach notice — if a bad actor has access to customers’ encrypted password vaults, “all they would need is a victim’s master password.” An exposed or compromised password vault is only as strong as the encryption — and the password — used to scramble it.

The best thing you can do as a LastPass customer is to change your current LastPass master password to a new and unique password (or passphrase) that is written down and kept in a safe place. This means that your current LastPass vault is secured.

If you think that your LastPass password vault could be compromised — such as if your master password is weak or you’ve used it elsewhere — you should begin changing the passwords stored in your LastPass vault.
Start with the most critical accounts, such as your email accounts, your cell phone plan account, your bank accounts and your social media accounts, and work your way down the priority list.

The good news is that any account protected with two-factor authentication will make it far more difficult for an attacker to access your accounts without that second factor, such as a phone pop-up or a texted or emailed code. That’s why it’s important to secure those second-factor accounts first, like your email accounts and cell phone plan accounts.
 
They never tell people when these things happen...always some time after...should be some kind of punishment for that especially for a security company like LastPass...people could have changed their passwords from jump


These are 2 post taken from their blog.

Update as of Thursday, September 15, 2022

To All LastPass Customers,  

On August 25th, 2022, we notified you about a security incident that was limited to the LastPass Development environment in which some of our source code and technical information was taken. I wanted to update you on the conclusion of our investigation to provide transparency and peace-of-mind to our consumer and business communities.


-------------------------------------------------

Original post from August 25, 2022

To All LastPass Customers,


I want to inform you of a development that we feel is important for us to share with our LastPass business and consumer community.

Two weeks ago, we detected some unusual activity within portions of the LastPass development environment. After initiating an immediate investigation, we have seen no evidence that this incident involved any access to customer data or encrypted password vaults.

-------------------------------------------



So, this occurred/realized around August 10. They claim that they "notified" me. Yet I didnt receive an email until December 1 :mad:

"In keeping with our commitment to transparency, we wanted to inform you of a security incident that our team is currently investigating....."

Nowhere in the email do they make reference to reaching out to me previously about this incident that is 3+ months old .
 
They never tell people when these things happen...always some time after...should be some kind of punishment for that especially for a security company like LastPass...people could have changed their passwords from jump
A lot of times companies don't even know their data has been stolen.
 
When these companies allow this to happen

They should be fined HEAVILY.

Users should be informed IMMEDIATELY

and if not?

Compensated WELL.

This happens much to often with bullsh*t fines, they hide the incident and the victims aren't made whole.
 
But we have so many instances of them actively lying and covering up breeches that I think they lost that benefit of the doubt a long time ago.
Also this is LastPass we are talking about here...the "didn't know" excuse is not equally applicable across industries...LastPass should know (easier said than done)...their entire business model is built on knowing that shit...I say this as someone who was a part of the OPM hack...I know China got all my info
 
This was reported some months ago.

We can no longer depend on services like this. I turned off my autopay last week.

Passwords are obsolete. Now you have to have 2FA for anything sensitive. Just a password is not going to be secure.

Agreed.. I use Authy now for 2FA because Google Auth didnt let me save in the past(not sure if they do now) and had to go through a little bit of hell to get access when my phone bricked. Unfortunately, there are still a lot of sites that dont have the option, especially when i order firearms related items as an example.
 
Agreed.. I use Authy now for 2FA because Google Auth didnt let me save in the past(not sure if they do now) and had to go through a little bit of hell to get access when my phone bricked. Unfortunately, there are still a lot of sites that dont have the option, especially when i order firearms related items as an example.

I have some 26 character passwords committed to memory for those old sites. As an IT hobbyist/professional I have seen too many people get got. 2FA is a must for me to do any sensitive anything.
 
This was reported some months ago.

We can no longer depend on services like this. I turned off my autopay last week.

Passwords are obsolete. Now you have to have 2FA for anything sensitive. Just a password is not going to be secure.

Tech Advice of the month
 
This was reported some months ago.

We can no longer depend on services like this. I turned off my autopay last week.

Passwords are obsolete. Now you have to have 2FA for anything sensitive. Just a password is not going to be secure.

I have to get on this I keep being lazy about setting this up on all my important accounts
 
I use a number of tactics to protect my passwords and account access. I got a wake up call when I got an email like this a couple of years back with my simple password.

scam_email_your_password_has_been_hacked.jpg




The biggest threat for me is internal employees with superuser access looking at your information. They bribe the company which looks the other way with your data for lucrative business opportunities in that country.
 
1Password is excellent, especially if you’re all Apple devices, but it’s subscription. Bitwarden has been great for me and the free version is all most people need. Works across all platforms
I like bitwarden since it's open source and the guy who makes it is pretty open about updates while 1Password is closed sourced. 1Password is more polished though, surprised apple hasnt bought them out yet.
 
Looks like I'm need more protection for my computer, so I'm gonna do some research on bitwarden

I already have a yubikey for my computer.
 
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