computerworld.com — The stolen credentials belong to companies from around the world and include more than 2500 North American companies, some of which are the world's top 100 domains, according to security company Finjan. The ISP hosting the db has been notified but they still have not removed it. Finjan says companies can email them to check if their info was stolen
Feb 27, 2008 View in Crawl 4
megamodFeb 28, 2008
He said he was going to upload terabytes of music, not that they already have terabytes of mp3s....you n00b
Closed AccountFeb 28, 2008
Digg needs to f**king do something about misspelled headlines. It is happening far too often. God damn people, is it so hard to reread your headline before you submit? Is it so hard to go to dictionary.com and verify that all words are spelled correctly?
vsujohn2Feb 28, 2008
You dont Rick Roll someone by SAYING its a rick roll, what f**kin idiot does that?
monikerdFeb 28, 2008
not so much "leaked", as "rumored to exist"
Closed AccountMar 26, 2008
Web-hosting login details are stolen pretty regularly, the worst someone plausibly do to all those sites is deface them or such. Evil people with curly mustaches having FTP details for big business' internal FTPd is a lot worse than some websites website being defaced or such..In fact, T35 is a free webhost, so it's even less of a problem.. Chances are 90% of those sites are completely idle, most of the email addresses dead, and the amount of sensitive data is probably close to 0%..