Widespread Compromise Of Yahoo-Backed Email In New Zealand 47
First time accepted submitter Bitsy Boffin writes "Xtra, the largest ISP in New Zealand, which outsources email provision to Yahoo, has in the last two days been subject to a widespread email compromise, causing potentially thousands of accounts to send spam messages to every address in their webmail address books. Discussion at Geekzone centers around this potentially being a continuation of the Yahoo XSS exploit. While Telecom NZ, the owners of Xtra internet service provider indicate that the problem was "resolved", reports of spam from its members continue unabated. Telecom NZ are advising those affected to change their passwords."
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We only have one dinosaur [wikipedia.org] here.
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Lucky you; we've got 226 [wikipedia.org] over here.
bellsouth.net accounts too (Score:2, Informative)
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It's basically a random message with a URL attached... many of them .ru domains. They're being sent to the .mac account that I've had since whenever it was .mac was originally started. There were a one or two initially starting back around Wednesday and it's become about 10 a day the past couple
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Interesting and quite clever, however both my sister-in-law and wife suffered from this in the past two weeks. I checked my wife's Yahoo login history and at the time of the spam there was a login from another country (Japan). Were this a hidden frame login I'd expect it to appear local.
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remember! (Score:5, Funny)
Remember, the original concept of the internet as a peer to peer network was a bad idea. Centralizing to just a handful of services is a good idea, and we should all use the cloud for everything, because that has no drawbacks.
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Related to huge spike of spam? (Score:3)
I wonder if it's a coincidence that in the last three or four days I started to receive a lot more spam to my Yahoo mail address. By "a lot more" I mean three or four times more than what I was receiving a week ago each day.
I don't have any relation with anyone in New Zealand, so my guess is that it's indeed just a coincidence. But still the timing makes me wonder.
Re:Related to huge spike of spam? (Score:5, Insightful)
or the New Zealand Yahoo is not the only one compromised, just the only one to admit it.
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or the New Zealand Yahoo is not the only one compromised, just the only one to admit it.
Two of my friends on Facebook were talking about spam originating from their Yahoo! accounts yesterday and I received a spam from a third (or, I should say one made it through my spam filter). None of them have any ties to New Zealand, as far as I know.
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Re:Related to huge spike of spam? (Score:5, Funny)
> Once in the yahoo proverbial back door, I wouldn't be surprised if they got more. I don't know what yahoo's architecture is like though.
sounds, to me, like you work there.
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or the New Zealand Yahoo is not the only one compromised, just the only one to admit it.
Two of my friends on Facebook were talking about spam originating from their Yahoo! accounts yesterday and I received a spam from a third (or, I should say one made it through my spam filter). None of them have any ties to New Zealand, as far as I know.
My Yahoo account was hacked a month or so ago - I had a 12 character password including mixed case (in non-obvious places), digits and a special symbol, so i don't think the password was brute forced... I think they have a bigger problem than they have admitted.
Re:Related to huge spike of spam? (Score:4, Informative)
From all over (Score:1)
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The one I looked at was an e-mail with one-line body urging me to check
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Xtra hasn't existed for years (Score:1)
Telecom NZ phased out the xtra branding many years ago...it only lives in email addresses....hence why it's referred to in this story I guess :)
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Spoofing sender e-mail address (Score:2)
A Yahoo customer is reported by TFA saying
The spam from my own address must be generated on the telecom/yahoo server as there is no other way it can happen
It is shockingly easy to spoof sender e-mail address. I do not expect any Yahoo user to know it, but the journalist that quoted this person should know that, and mitigate this claim of Yahoo server breach
Re:Spoofing sender e-mail address (Score:5, Informative)
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Not just address book.
I had mail sent to everyone in my Sent Items too, so they were trolling all the folders for addresses.
Additional Media Article, Confirms Compromise (Score:5, Informative)
http://www.stuff.co.nz/technology/digital-living/8287236/Xtra-email-accounts-compromised [stuff.co.nz]
It's the XSS flaw still active (Score:5, Interesting)
I got hit by this last week and blogged about it [aardvark.co.nz], griping that surely a company with the resources of Yahoo should be able to fix such a critical flaw faster than seems to be the case.
It would appear that Yahoo is happy to announce "fixexd" while the hackers simply exploit yet another hole in the company's shaky cloud.
Tragic.
Would Google be so lax in sorting out what is clearly a very critical issue that is affecting a large (and rapidly growing) number of users?
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How did they contact yahoo? (Score:1)
I tried to contact yahoo about spam from their servers.
The email listed in their ARIN record doesn't work
Abuse@yahoo.com points you to some stupid website
and there's no way to contact anyone through that, or they turned it off.
The above should be a criminal offense.
The nice thing about outsourcing... (Score:5, Insightful)
is that you have someone else to blame when things go wrong.
The bad thing about outsourcing....
when things do go wrong, there's usually more than enough blame to go around, and you look bad too anyway.
I am not surprised (Score:1)
The only thing that could be regarded as surprising is that this did not happen sooner. Xtra is shit and Telecom are fucking clueless. This vuln was raised last year and Telecom sat around with their heads their asses to their shoulders. But the void of clue flock to them, believing the advertorial bullshit. They are the AOL of New Zealand, only worse.
Australia too (Score:2)
I just sent this to a friend who uses Yahoo. His email was broadcasting spam late last week. He thought it was his PC but maybe not...
Nice of google to censor the demo video (Score:2)
"This video has been removed as a violation of YouTube's policy on depiction of harmful activities. "
One could repeat the very first comment about centralised services here too.