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Over 100M Accounts of Russia's Largest Social Network VK On Sale (vice.com) 28

Accounts of over 100 million users of VK.com, Russia's largest social network is being traded on the digital underground. A hacker who goes by the alias "Peace," listed the date for sale on a dark web marketplace. Vice's Motherboard publication reports that it received a dataset of over 100,544,934 records from Peace. From the report: According to Peace, the passwords were already in plain text when the site was hacked, and were not cracked at a later date. Peace is selling the data for 1 bitcoin, or around $570 at today's exchange rates. Out of 100 randomly selected email addresses from the larger dataset, 92 corresponded to active accounts on the site, Motherboard found. A Russian friend contacted by Motherboard confirmed that the password was correct.The report adds that the actual hack occurred between 2011 and 2013, and that Peace has data of another 70 million users that it isn't selling right now.
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Over 100M Accounts of Russia's Largest Social Network VK On Sale

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  • How do we know it's not VK itself? It's effectively owned by the RF government. And they are not exactly known for being straight players.... VK was hacked by "volunteers"... the same ones who occupied Crimea before RF officially took it over.
    • Enlighten me as to who IS a straight player??
  • by theskipper ( 461997 ) on Monday June 06, 2016 @10:55AM (#52259267)

    The most common password after 'password1' was 'dadada'. Wonder what that's all about?

    • by Anonymous Coward

      The most common password after 'password1' was 'dadada'. Wonder what that's all about?

      it means yesyesyes

      • The most common password after 'password1' was 'dadada'. Wonder what that's all about?

        it means yesyesyes

        So based on dating attempts, most Russian slashdotters would use the pw "nyetnyetnyet"?

  • Obligatory (Score:5, Funny)

    by U2xhc2hkb3QgU3Vja3M ( 4212163 ) on Monday June 06, 2016 @11:03AM (#52259323)

    In Soviet Russia, Social Network owns YOU!

    Oh wait, they're all like that.

    Carry on.

  • by account_deleted ( 4530225 ) on Monday June 06, 2016 @11:22AM (#52259459)
    Comment removed based on user account deletion
    • maybe do not eat insecurity potato.

      Okay, I confess- that made me laugh.

      (SJWs- please advise me if I should feel guilty about laughing at this horrible depiction of Russians, and the cultural appropriation it surely embodies.)

      • >please advise me if I should feel guilty about laughing at this horrible depiction of Russians, and the cultural appropriation it surely embodies

        No SJW, but a Russian here. The "maybe do not eat insecurity potato" is pretty much against the core principle of https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]' and thus very un-Russian. Perhaps cultural misappropriation is of better describings here, comrade.

        Here's another example from Russian vernacular. "If you have a bottle of vodka that looks weird, has label badly gl

        • The Wikipedia URL mentioned should have ended with a %27 which capitalist Slashdot decided to change into a apostrophe outside the link for some reason. Nekharasho.

      • Don't worry. Most cultures are not worried about cultural appropriation. In fact, they go out of their way to create export their culture. In fact, even the people complaining about cultural appropriation are more likely just trying to stymie cultural import. I can just see it: europeans apologizing to americans for eating burgers, wearing blue jeans and watching Hollywood movies because its a microaggression in the form of cultural appropriation.
  • VK is where I search for my porn. There's some wild and crazy stuff on VK.

  • See Slashdot front page ad for details...

  • I'm expecting the Russian media to start claiming the hack was orchestrated by the CIA as part of a plot to undermine Russian culture, weaken their economy and make it easier to monitor their communications.

    At this point, I wouldn't be too surprised if they were right.

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