All Twitch accounts/stream keys have been reset. - Page 2
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Orcasgt24
Canada3238 Posts
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ahswtini
Northern Ireland22203 Posts
On March 24 2015 16:27 _fool wrote: Off topic: I never realized a "gunsafe" is a common household object in the US. Is it like a big heavy breadbox stuck on a shelf somewhere? Or built in the wall? generally a metal cabinet bolted to a wall | ||
YourGoodFriend
United States2197 Posts
With lasers shooting out both ends and bombs wired to go off of the wrong person opens it and Murica stickers all over it. You know the normal stuff | ||
JohnerFX
Poland18 Posts
"We are writing to let you know that there may have been unauthorized access to some Twitch user account information." This is serious | ||
Ljas
Finland725 Posts
On March 24 2015 21:42 JohnerFX wrote: The most important thing in this information is that there was probably a SECURITY BREACH on Twitch and users data was stolen. "We are writing to let you know that there may have been unauthorized access to some Twitch user account information." This is serious Oh, so that's what it says in the email that you got. "We are writing to let you know that there may have been unauthorized access to some of your Twitch user account information" Fuuu | ||
JohnerFX
Poland18 Posts
http://blog.twitch.tv/2015/03/important-notice-about-your-twitch-account/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=important-notice-about-your-twitch-account My email confused me that only my account could have been hacked but it seems whole Twitch might have been hacked !! | ||
sharkie
Austria18228 Posts
On March 24 2015 16:28 GiveMeCake wrote: Somehow my main email was compromised last week.. Today I got the email that Twitch was compromised and saw it as a connection... Thankfully I wasn't alone, but having someone go into your email you've had for 17 years is extremely unsettling. dont use the same password... | ||
AbouSV
Germany1278 Posts
https://xkcd.com/936/ BUT, most of the cases, when you are forced to use very strong password, you are limited to quite few characters (like 12~15). | ||
Shield
Bulgaria4824 Posts
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l3loodraven
2753 Posts
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LordOfDabu
United States388 Posts
On March 25 2015 00:20 AbouSV wrote: Whenever I hear about password strength, I think about this: https://xkcd.com/936/ BUT, most of the cases, when you are forced to use very strong password, you are limited to quite few characters (like 12~15). Just stringing dictionary words like that would get cracked instantly. (see page 3 of http://arstechnica.com/security/2013/05/how-crackers-make-minced-meat-out-of-your-passwords/ for instance) | ||
ZeromuS
Canada13378 Posts
On March 25 2015 07:52 LordOfDabu wrote: Just stringing dictionary words like that would get cracked instantly. (see page 3 of http://arstechnica.com/security/2013/05/how-crackers-make-minced-meat-out-of-your-passwords/ for instance) Take a sentence with numbers in it, turn it into an acronym with numbers as single characters (five is 5) and then make sure there is punctuation. This is the single best way to do it, no real words makes it even harder for a computer to figure it out. So example: The dog ate five apples and six oranges! Crazy Tdafaso!C BAM! a p w ord. | ||
sorrowptoss
Canada1431 Posts
On March 25 2015 11:03 ZeromuS wrote: Take a sentence with numbers in it, turn it into an acronym with numbers as single characters (five is 5) and then make sure there is punctuation. This is the single best way to do it, no real words makes it even harder for a computer to figure it out. So example: The dog ate five apples and six oranges! Crazy Tdafaso!C BAM! a p w ord. Wow thanks for the advice ! | ||
ShloobeR
Korea (South)3803 Posts
On March 25 2015 11:03 ZeromuS wrote: Take a sentence with numbers in it, turn it into an acronym with numbers as single characters (five is 5) and then make sure there is punctuation. This is the single best way to do it, no real words makes it even harder for a computer to figure it out. So example: The dog ate five apples and six oranges! Crazy Tdafaso!C BAM! a p w ord. Until you realise that you forget the 'and' and then have to reset your password because you don't know what you did wrong =) at least that's what would happen to me =( | ||
ElMeanYo
United States1032 Posts
On March 24 2015 16:27 _fool wrote: Off topic: I never realized a "gunsafe" is a common household object in the US. Is it like a big heavy breadbox stuck on a shelf somewhere? Or built in the wall? Of course!? Where else would we store our guns?? | ||
ahswtini
Northern Ireland22203 Posts
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AbouSV
Germany1278 Posts
On March 25 2015 07:52 LordOfDabu wrote: Just stringing dictionary words like that would get cracked instantly. (see page 3 of http://arstechnica.com/security/2013/05/how-crackers-make-minced-meat-out-of-your-passwords/ for instance) Yep, this example is to be taken with care, he is only speaking for character by character brute force crack, which is the level 0 of password crack. About Twitch, are financial data stored on the twitch account (like for stream ads)? Or are here other sensible information that can have been stolen? | ||
Arevall
Sweden1133 Posts
1."Reset your password Twitch will send reset instructions to the email address associated with your account." 2.I enter my password and email for the account. 3. Sorry, we don't have an email on file for that user account. What, they don't even have an email for my user account? := | ||
mantequilla
Turkey775 Posts
On March 24 2015 15:27 OuchyDathurts wrote: Use a password safe program, there's really no reason not to. There's plenty of options out there, they save all your passwords in one location, they'll make up complex passwords for you to use, they're ez as fuck to deal with. You can be a boss and set all your security questions to super complex random passwords as well for bonus safeguarding. Honestly you know you have apps for the dumbest shit in the world, there's no reason you shouldn't have one for your passwords. Keepass Totally free open source. It ain't pretty but it's what I use. Available for your droid and iphone as well to take your passwords with you. Stores everything locally. 1Password Expensive but prettier I guess. My brother uses it and likes it. Available on all platforms. Lastpass There are free and premium versions. Works on all platforms. Cloud based. Keeping separate complex passwords for everything is a good habit to get into. May as well start now. Thats just 3 varying options, I'm sure there's a million more available. The thing I don't get about those programs is, how can I trust all my passwords to an application? | ||
AbouSV
Germany1278 Posts
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