Microsoft India Store Finally Back Online!

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Hackers, allegedly belonging to a Chinese group called Evil Shadow Team, struck at Microsoft Store Online India on Sunday night, stealing login ids and passwords of people who had used the website for shopping Microsoft products.

While it is troublesome that hackers were able to breach security at a website owned by one of the biggest IT companies in the world, it is more alarming that user details - login ids and passwords - were reportedly stored in plain text file, without any encryption.

Following the hack, the members of Evil Shadow Team, posted a message on the Microsoft website saying "unsafe system will be baptized". The story was first reported by Windows Phone Sauce.

Later, the website seemed to have been taken offline by Microsoft. We advise the users at Microsoft India Store to change the password as soon the website comes online. Also, if they have used the same password or login id on any other web service, they should change it immediately.

Last year, hacker groups like Lulzsec had carried out several-profile high profile break-ins, putting focus on the security measures companies put in place. Sony allegedly suffered several security breaches and hackers stole user ids and passwords of customers from its network.

In a message posted on a website called Pastebin, Lulzsec claimed the group was bringing attention to the web security. "Do you think every hacker announces everything they've hacked? We certainly haven't, and we're damn sure others are playing the silent game. Do you feel safe with your Facebook accounts, your Google Mail accounts, your Skype accounts? What makes you think a hacker isn't silently sitting inside all of these right now," the group wrote.

But the incident at Microsoft Store on Sunday hints that lessons have not been learnt. Just like Sony, which later revealed that user ids and passwords were not encrypted at the time of security breach, Microsoft too seemed to have been casual about handling the user details by storing them in a plain text file.

Commenting on the security breach, a Microsoft spokesperson said, "Microsoft is investigating a limited compromise of the company's online store in India. The store customers have already been sent guidance on the issue and suggested immediate actions. We are diligently working to remedy the issue and keep our customers protected."

Source:: http://articles.timesofindia.indiatimes.com/2012-02-13/security/31054691_1_passwords-security-breach-hackers

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Here is the current status::
 
And they carelessly stored passwords in plain text! Wow!
 
In this case, the online Microsoft Store in India is managed by a third-party service provider rather than Microsoft itself. Microsoft itself is less culpable, but it should require more from the vendors it works with, and its agreement should explicitly spell out a minimum level of acceptable protection for customer data.

Source
 
just tried the password recovery option on letsbuy and they mailed me a 'new password' in plain text. a new randomly generated password!



two problems with this bullcrap.

1. they are likely using raw text passwords because of what we have already discussed.
2. ANYONE can reset your password ANYTIME by using your email address in their password recovery form.

flipkart is doing it better. they send you a link. which you have to click to land on a page where you can enter your own password. they are not generating a new password and mailing it to you in plain text.
Heh Letsbuy site is a joke. I was about to say that they don't even have a "My profile/account" sort of a thing with your address n stuff. Just logged in to check and it seems they have that now.
 
So a crazy mind has got the KILL SWITCH of MS Store! :haha:
 



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