The Naz.API dataset is a massive collection of 1 billion credentials compiled using credential stuffing lists and data stolen by information-stealing malware.

Credential stuffing lists are collections of login name and password pairs stolen from previous data breaches that are used to breach accounts on other sites.

Information-stealing malware attempts to steal a wide variety of data from an infected computer, including credentials saved in browsers, VPN clients, and FTP clients. This type of malware also attempts to steal SSH keys, credit cards, cookies, browsing history, and cryptocurrency wallets.

  • @henfredemars@infosec.pub
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    794 months ago

    A stern reminder that we should all use a password management tool and use unique, unrelated passwords with every service.

          • BolexForSoup
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            4 months ago

            Step 1: drop gmail

            Step 2: get proton mail and activate simple login or use one of the alias slots they give you (or both!). Enjoy.

            Optional step 3: Use Firefox relay on top if you really want to go wild but I find this gets folks turned around when layered on top as well. Great for burner/1-time use emails though.b

          • @seathru@lemm.ee
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            34 months ago

            That used to be my go-to method but I found it works less and less. Places know the gmail tricks and auto-strip them out of the address.

            Started using Proton’s Hide-my-email and never going back. It’s time to move away from google anyways.

          • @EmbeddedEntropy
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            14 months ago

            I used to use that approach, but found in the last several years more than half the web sites I use reject email addresses with “+” characters.

            I even use several sites that used to take those addresses just fine now reject them. That made me wonder if some common JS package for parsing email addresses got changed.

        • @Bocky@lemmy.world
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          64 months ago

          Duck.com is what I use, I generate a unique email for every website. I even started changing my old logins recently for old accounts

        • trevor
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          24 months ago

          I agree with doing this, but the main drawback is that you can’t easily check all of your unique aliases in HaveIBeenPwned without scripting something and paying for API access.

          I have hundreds of unique aliases for my accounts, but no simple way to see when/if the services that use them are breached.

          • @taladar@sh.itjust.works
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            34 months ago

            That is not a standard mail feature, it won’t work with all mail servers and not all that do have it use + as the separator.

            • xor
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              04 months ago

              While it’s not formalised in the email specs, support for it is pretty consistent, and only needs to work for whichever provider you use

      • @Sir_Kevin@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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        104 months ago

        I always get funny looks when in person and I give my email address as YourCompanyName@MyDomain.com

        I used to explain the how’s and the why’s but now I just say I’m a geek and move along. But if I start getting spam or bullshit to that address best believe I know who fucked up.

  • gregorum
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    154 months ago

    Yeah, I got an alert in my email last night about this. Now I have to go through a massive password reset. Fun!

  • @dez
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    84 months ago

    One more thing to say to me to speed up changing my services related to gmail and delete it forever.

        • @space@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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          4 months ago

          You can find a password checking utility on haveibeenpwned.com (the tool doesn’t send your password to the server, but only the first 5 characters of the hashed password, which is very safe). There are CLI tools on GitHub you can use to bulk test passwords. They also provide a downloadable list of hashes.

          Alternatively, check if your password manager has a built-in tool for checking for passwords in known databases.

          • deweydecibel
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            24 months ago

            Alternatively, just start changing passwords, regardless if they’re in the breach or not. Prioritize the ones with financial information, then the ones with personal info, the ones you visit frequently versus some shitty site you visited once that made you make an account back in 2011, etc.

            I know that’s a lot of accounts for some people but you don’t have to do them all at once. Go reset a password or two on a site today at lunch. Then do another one tomorrow. And a few the next day.

            I actually remember reading about an app or feature on a password manager that would do something like this. Rather than bark at you to reset 100 different accounts at once, it would just give you 1 or 2 random accounts a day to go reset the password on.

    • Pika
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      4 months ago

      What’s more insane is that some of those passwords in the lists are I still live intrusions that companies haven’t acted on, like for example my Dropbox password is there and that’s a new password that I just gave them a few months ago before I deleted my account

  • Chaos
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    34 months ago

    I’ve checked the list on mine, those are some really really old passwords… Must’ve been a long time ago.