If you were affected by the absolutely humongous Yahoo data breaches in recent years -- and The Pursuit of Lustgiven they were so damn big, there's a decent chance you were -- you may be in luck. A judge just paved the way for affected users to sue the tech giant.
SEE ALSO: Clever hackers don't even need your password to access your accountU.S. District Judge Lucy Koh in San Jose, California made the ruling on Wednesday in a 93-page decision, declaring that affected victims certainly did have a right to go after Yahoo because, “All plaintiffs have alleged a risk of future identity theft, in addition to loss of value of their personal identification information."
The ruling relates to the breaches that hit Yahoo between 2013 and 2016, affecting hundreds of millions of users, breaches that the company was incredibly slow to confirm and publicly report, leaving those users vulnerable to theft and fraud.
At this point, there have been enough breaches and Yahoo's been so slow to fess up that it's understandable if you're a little confused, so here's a brief run-down:
August 2013:More than 1 billion accounts were affected by a data breach that it didn't fully disclose until over three years laterin December 2016. The main concern from the breach was that names, email addresses, phone numbers, dates of birth, MD5-hashed passwords (a form of encryption now widely considered insecure), and security question answers were exposed.
Late 2014: Though this breach that affected 500 million users happened after the 2013 hack, it was actually admitted before the company revealed the larger breach, which may account for the messy timeline. The information exposed in this leak was similar to the 2013 leak, i.e. no payment or bank account information was believed to be accessed. It was actually in investigating this breach that Yahoo apparently "discovered" the 2013 breach, too.
2015-2016: Another round of data breaches occurred throughout 2015 and 2016, according to a December 2016 statement by Yahoo. At the time, Yahoo said it believed the hack was committed by the same "state-sponsored hacker" who perpetrated the big 2014 breach. The perp used, according to the company, "forged cookies" to get into accounts without having to use a password.
I mean... yeah, that's bad.
You likely read tons of stories on what you should do if you were a victim of one of these breaches and, now, it seems Justice Koh thinks filing a lawsuit is also appropriate.
This is more bad news for Verizon, which purchased Yahoo in early 2017 after getting a small discount for all those data breaches. Verizon faced its own data breach in the summer of 2017 when millions of its customers had information exposed on an unsecured server.
So, in a sense, the Verizon/Yahoo purchase made perfect sense, like two tire fires joining forces to become one gigantic tire fire that's now gonna cost that fire a whole lotta money to all the people it burned.
Topics Verizon Yahoo
How to market your side hustle on InstagramHow to watch Aubrey Plaza's 'My Old Ass' at home: Streaming Nov. 7NYT Connections Sports Edition hints and answers for November 1: Tips to solve Connections #38.'Over the Garden Wall' turns 10 this year, so there's no better time to rewatchNew York, L.A. rivalry spills over from World Series to subways, freeways and AIBest tablet Deal: Save $50 on Galaxy Tab A9+Best gaming laptop deal: 27% off Razer Blade 16 Gaming LaptopBest Budget Headphones deal: Save £17 on Soundcore Q20iBest Apple iPad deal: Save $100 on the 13Halloween 2024: Weekend debates, obscure memes, and a legacy of racismNYT Connections Sports Edition hints and answers for November 1: Tips to solve Connections #38.NYT Connections hints and answers for October 31: Tips to solve 'Connections' #508.Duke vs. Miami football livestreams: kickoff time, streaming deals, and moreEverything ChristmasBest Buy is offering the new M4 Mac Mini for $275 with qualifying trade'Janet Planet' review: Annie Baker's motherBest headphone deal: JBL Tune 770NC headphones are $30 offIs 'The Substance' streaming? How to watch at homeNaNoWriMo says use AI if you want. Here's why you might.Best Budget Headphones deal: Save £17 on Soundcore Q20i CATL seeks to manufacture batteries in the US pending Trump’s approval · TechNode JD.com reports 5.1% revenue growth in Q3 2024 · TechNode Mate 70 series features 100% domestically produced chips: Huawei exec · TechNode XREAL launches new AR glasses XREAL One with native 3DoF spatial tracking · TechNode NIO reports mixed third quarter as new SUV faces slow ramp up · TechNode ByteDance aims to launch video China’s Xpeng Motors unveils hybrid EV system and AI chipset · TechNode Talking Tom AI robot to launch before lunar new year · TechNode China files WTO complaint over EV tariffs as trade talks stall · TechNode Chinese YouTube star Li Ziqi returns to social media after 3 SF Holding lists on Hong Kong Stock Exchange · TechNode SenseTime completes strategic restructuring to focus on AI cloud and vision · TechNode Alibaba group reports steady growth in Q2 2024, as net income soars 63% · TechNode Huawei Mate 70 series sells out on launch day, pre Volkswagen cuts prices of China Key executives depart as Baidu restructures healthcare division · TechNode Home retail giant Haier rumored to acquire car media platform Autohome · TechNode Uber set to invest in self Stellantis Gaode Map launches industry's first online cycling map of China · TechNode
2.3357s , 8223.8671875 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【The Pursuit of Lust】,Unobstructed Information Network