A hacker who has previously put up for sale over 840 million user records in the past month, has returned with a fourth round of hacked data that he's selling on a dark web marketplace. . This time, the hacker has put up for sale the data of six companies, totaling 26.42 million user records, for which he's asking 1.2431 bitcoin ($4,940). The hacker's name is Gnosticplayers, and since February 11 the hacker has put up for sale data for 32 companies in three rounds [stories on Round 1, Round 2, and Round 3] on Dream Market, a dark web marketplace. The link for this article located at ZDNet is no longer available. . This time, the hacker has put up for sale the data of six companies, totaling 26.42 million user rec. hacker, previously, million, records, month. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
An online gift certificate company said a hacker that blackmailed it for weeks after pilfering its customer information has apparently carried out threats of disclosing the data to its customers. Webcertificate.com customers reported getting an e-mail message that included their home and e-mail addresses.. . .. An online gift certificate company said a hacker that blackmailed it for weeks after pilfering its customer information has apparently carried out threats of disclosing the data to its customers. Webcertificate.com customers reported getting an e-mail message that included their home and e-mail addresses. "I hate to inform you that your account has been hacked," said the e-mail, viewed by this reporter, from someone identified as Zilterio. Webcertificate, a unit of electronic-payment company Ecount, was hacked Aug. 21, a representative said. Shortly afterward, the hacker, who also claimed to have stolen credit card numbers of 350,000 of the company's customers, contacted Philadelphia-based Ecount and tried to extort the company, said Matt Gillin, Ecount's chief executive. The caller demanded $45,000 in exchange for not disclosing the information. The company refused to meet the demands, Gillin said. The link for this article located at ZDNet is no longer available. . An online gift certificate company said a hacker that blackmailed it for weeks after pilfering its c. online, certificate, company, hacker, blackmailed, weeks, pilfering. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
Get the latest Linux and open source security news straight to your inbox.