DazJW
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I've started a new thread for this rather than continuing a previous one because the situation has changed in a way that requires more people's attention and it won't get that with a bumped thread.
Adobe originally said data for around 3 million accounts had been hacked. Then they upped this to 38 million.
There's now a database online which contains 150 million accounts worth of data (Source) and to make matters worse it's stored in a very alarming way - including passwords in poor, repeated encryption and password hints in plain text (Source). There's speculation in that second article about whether credit card information might be equally poorly handled and a comment at the end of it article from someone about suspicious activity on their credit card which suggests it has been.
It's also likely that the 150 million account database is only a partial disclosure of what was retrieved so it's best to assume every account has been compromised even if you haven't had communication from Adobe or got a hit on your e-mail address using the LastPass checker.
If you have, or have ever had, an Adobe account you need to change the password of that account and the password of every single other account that uses that password immediately regardless of whether Adobe has notified you or not. If Adobe had your credit card details you need to monitor your statements very carefully or terminate the card and get a new one.
Adobe originally said data for around 3 million accounts had been hacked. Then they upped this to 38 million.
There's now a database online which contains 150 million accounts worth of data (Source) and to make matters worse it's stored in a very alarming way - including passwords in poor, repeated encryption and password hints in plain text (Source). There's speculation in that second article about whether credit card information might be equally poorly handled and a comment at the end of it article from someone about suspicious activity on their credit card which suggests it has been.
It's also likely that the 150 million account database is only a partial disclosure of what was retrieved so it's best to assume every account has been compromised even if you haven't had communication from Adobe or got a hit on your e-mail address using the LastPass checker.
If you have, or have ever had, an Adobe account you need to change the password of that account and the password of every single other account that uses that password immediately regardless of whether Adobe has notified you or not. If Adobe had your credit card details you need to monitor your statements very carefully or terminate the card and get a new one.
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I have bought CS5 from them in the past. Strange.