Yesterday we informed our community of the Heartbleed OpenSSL bug. In our blog post, we explained how this security issue impacted our service and what our users should know about the situation. We also built a tool to help our users start checking to see if their sites and services had reissued their certificates, so that users would know if it was safe to start updating passwords for those sites
It's time to update your passwords to various sites affected by the Heartbleed bug. Credit: Mashable composite. iStockphoto, SoberP An encryption flaw called the Heartbleed bug is already being dubbed one of the biggest security threats the Internet has ever seen. The bug has affected many popular websites and services -- ones you might use every day, like Gmail and Facebook -- and could have quie
Just an update on "HeartBleed". Yesterday I updated my "masscan" program to scan for it, and last night we scanned the Internet. We found 28,581,134 machines (28-million) that responded with a valid SSL connection. Of those, only 615,268 (600-thousand) were vulnerable to the HeartBleed bug. We also found 330,531 (300-thousand) machines that had heartbeats enabled, but which did not respond to the
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