One million users compromised in Sony hack

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One million users compromised in Sony hack

Fresh from its high profile attack on PBS, online group lulzsec has hacked Sony, and revealed stored passwords were not encrypted.

Hacker group Lulzsec has compromised the personal information of more than one million users of SonyPictures.com.

The revelation deals another devastating blow to a company already reeling from a number of recent intrusions, most notably the breach of the Sony PlayStation Network, one of the largest reported data theft incidents of all time.

A Sony Pictures spokesperson could not be immediately reached for comment by phone or email.

LulzSec said its members exploited a common SQL injection vulnerability to gain access to internal Sony networks and websites.

The hack yielded the passwords, email addresses, home addresses, birth dates and other account information belonging to more than one million users.

The intruders posted some of the booty on their newly created website.

The group also claimed it made away with 3.5 million music coupon codes, which apparently can be used to redeem songs that appear in film soundtracks.

The hackers said they did not have the resources or money to copy everything they compromised in their campaign, which they nicknamed "Sownage," but they posted samples to their website "to prove its authenticity."

"From a single injection, we accessed everything," the group said in the news release. "Why do you put such faith in a company that allows itself to become open to these simple attacks? What's worse is that every bit of data we took wasn't encrypted...This is disgraceful and insecure: They were asking for it."

Sony has drawn the ire of groups like LulzSec and Anonymous in recent months because the company is pursuing legal action against George Hotz, a hacker who allegedly violated federal copyright law by jailbreaking the PlayStation 3.

However, both groups have denied being responsible for the massive PlayStation Network heist.

The attack follows the massive compromise of US broadcaster PBS by the group.

This article originally appeared at scmagazineus.com

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