email_password_hack_not_as_bad_as_first_thoughtNot long ago, a company called Hold Security issued a report of its rather disturbing finding. A massive database was found for sale in the dark corners of the internet, containing nearly three hundred million email addresses and passwords. This information was collected from all of the biggest email providers, including Mail.ru, Aol, Google, Yahoo, and Hotmail, and represented the single largest heist of email data in history.

The problem? It turns out that on closer examination, the supposed data breach was mostly hype.

While the data collected was real, most of it was so dated that it was useless. Mail.ru requested a sample of the data found from Hold security and analyzed it. Their findings were as follows:

64.3% of the database entries contained either incorrect (outdated) passwords, or no passwords at all
22.6% contained email addresses that did not actually exist in the system
12.4% of the entries had already been marked as suspicious and blocked by the company
0.018% of the entries had valid usernames and passwords – the owners of those accounts have already been notified.

So if Mail.ru’s experience is typical, then let’s break that down. The original database in question was said to have information on a total of 272 million email accounts. If 0.018% of those are potentially active, that brings the total number of accounts impacted by the breach to just under fifty thousand, spread across half a dozen email providers.

While that number is certainly nothing to sneeze at, it’s a far cry from the originally reported 272 million, and isn’t a large enough breach to even register on the radar of most of these email providers. Consider, for instance, that Google’s Gmail alone boasts more than 1 billion user accounts. Even if all 50,000 potentially active accounts were Gmail accounts, it wouldn’t be a statistically significant number.

All that to say, it appears this was (mostly) a false alarm. That’s actually good news.

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