Livestream Warns Customers Of Possible Data Breach

The video live streaming platform Livestream has emailed its customers to warn them of a possible data breach.

The email said customers should reset their Livestream passwords, after admitting that an unauthorised person may have accessed its customer accounts database.

Data Breach

The company said that account information, including names, dates of birth, phone numbers, email addresses and encrypted passwords may have been accessed.

“We recently discovered that an unauthorised person may have accessed our customer accounts database,” the company was quoted as saying by Engadget.

“While we are still investigating the full scope of the incident, it is possible that some of your account information may have been accessed,” the company stated. “This may include name, email address, an encrypted version of your password, and if you provided it to us, date of birth and/or phone number.”

“We do not store credit card or other payment information,” it added. “We have no indication that the encrypted passwords have been decoded, but in an abundance of caution, we are requiring all users to reset their passwords

Worried users can click here to reset their passwords.

Password Reuse

The obvious danger with this breach is that people tend to reuse their passwords for multiple websites and services, a point made by security expert Graham Cluley.

“Obviously it would be wise to ensure that you are not reusing your LiveStream password anywhere else on the net,” said Cluley. “Password reuse is perhaps the biggest problem with passwords – worse than choosing easy-to-guess passwords.”

“If you do make the mistake of reusing passwords, you are running the risk of having your password compromised in one place (perhaps via a phishing attack or key logger) and then hackers using it to unlock your other online accounts,” he warned.

He recommended that customers burdened with password overload use password management software such as LastPass, 1Password, and KeePass.

“Even if passwords have not been cracked, there remains the potential for anyone who has accessed LiveStream’s customer database to use it to send spam emails and phishing campaigns – so please be on your guard,” warned Cluley.

Are you a security pro? Try our quiz!

Tom Jowitt

Tom Jowitt is a leading British tech freelancer and long standing contributor to Silicon UK. He is also a bit of a Lord of the Rings nut...

Recent Posts

Meta Adds ‘Live AI’ To Ray-Ban Smart Glasses

Facebook parent Meta adds AI voice chat, live translation to Ray-Ban Meta smart glasses as…

21 hours ago

US Senate Criticises Amazon Over Warehouse Safety

Senate study finds Amazon did not implement protections recommended by internal studies over risk they…

21 hours ago

US Lawmaker Calls For Drone Detection Tech After Runway Closure

US senate majority leader calls for federal deployment of drone detection technology after drone sightings…

22 hours ago

TikTok Shop US Sales Surpass Shein, Sephora

After launching in September 2023, TikTok Shop rises to broad popularity with US sales surpassing…

22 hours ago

China Chip Investment Plummets Amidst US Restrictions

Investment in China's semiconductor industry falls by one-third this year as US tightens restrictions, state…

23 hours ago

Bitcoin Hits New High Over $107,000 On Trump Comments

Bitcoin surges more than 5 percent after Trump reaffirms plans for national strategic crypto reserve,…

23 hours ago