Hacker Sells LinkedIn Users’ Data for Bitcoin
A hacker, going by the name of Peace has put over 117 million LinkedIn user credentials up for sale on a deep web marketplace. LinkedIn, the professional networking site now has millions of users’ credentials in the public domain. These credentials from the beginning of this decade are up for sale on the deep web. Nothing is private or secure on the internet. Whether it is your photos stored on a cloud platform, credit card information, banking details or login credentials for your mail and social media accounts. If they are not compromised already, then they may get stolen anytime. The....
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Data breaches remain a lucrative business for Internet criminals, especially when they want to sell information for Bitcoin. A data dump containing over 33 million hacked Twitter accounts are now up for grabs in exchange for 10 Bitcoin. According to ZDNet, the hacker selling these Twitter details has been linked to the recent LinkedIn, Tumblr, and Myspace data breaches. But this time, the individual – or collective – went after a much bigger platform by targeting Twitter. As it turns out, platform users have had their passwords exposed somehow. Malware seems to be the most likely culprit,....
According to new data from Linkedin, a professional work-based social network, the number of cryptocurrency-related job postings soared in 2021. The increase was even higher than the general increase in tech-related job postings. The nature of these posts is also diversifying, with various industries requiring people with crypto know-how.
Linkedin Says Crypto Jobs Are on the Rise
An analysis of the cryptocurrency jobs sector made by the work-based social network Linkedin found that cryptocurrency job postings soared in 2021 even when compared to other growing fields. The company....
An opportunist using the name “DoubleFlag” has put the recently hacked BitcoinTalk.org’s database for sale on the dark web, according to Hackread. The same seller has also offered 68 million hacked hashed passwords of Dropbox users. In May 2015, BitcoinTalk was the victim of a social engineering attack after an unknown hacker targeted an employee of NFOrce, BitcoinTalk’s ISP. In a revelation on Reddit at the time, forum operator and administrator Theymos hinted that password hashes, private messages, emails and other user details could be compromised. User Data Exposed. As it turns out,....
Under the agreement, more than $2 million would be returned to Transit Swap users. On Oct. 10, decentralized finance (DeFi) protocol Transit Swap announced that it had reached an agreement with its biggest hacker for the return of funds. Approximately one week prior, a hacker exploited an internal bug on a swap contract within the protocol and caused other individuals to imitate the security breach, leading to a loss of over $23 million in user funds. However, the main hacker has since returned approximately 70% of exploited funds thanks to the help of security companies such as....
People who have been using the Internet for quite some time now will recall the name iMesh, a once popular peer-to-peer file sharing platform. Although this platform has been defunct for some time, a hacker managed to obtain a database containing 51 million accounts. Obtaining this information can be done through The Real Deal deep web marketplace, for the price of one Bitcoin. Data breaches are becoming a norm rather than the exception these days, and it appears as if the same hackers are responsible for most incidents. Peace, the alleged hacker of LinkedIn, is the person behind this....