Yahoo! Japan May Have Had 22 Million User IDs Stolen 28
hypnosec writes with report of the possible theft of up to 22 million user IDs revealed by Yahoo! Japan. That scale is massive, but, he writes, "According to Yahoo, the information that was stolen didn't have passwords or any other information that would allow unauthorized users to carry out user identity verification." A story at the Japan Times adds a bit more detail.
Re: (Score:3, Funny)
No, they just store the credentials of all their users around the world in Japan.
Re: (Score:1)
Does it matter?
There are backdoors in all these online services (the Skype one is now confirmed [randombit.net], btw), If you trust any personal data to them, expect it to be shared.
Re:Yahoo has 22 million .jp users? (Score:5, Informative)
Question is "why?" Why Yahoo! (mail, search,
There is a technical answer: most PCs come with Yahoo! stuff, the search is set to Y! and nobody changes that. The thing is, compared to the West, the Japanese do not have that "pursuit of genuineness" reaction - they trust what is popular and Y! is very popular...
Furthermore, there is no strong consumer association in Japan, and abuses (in any field) may remain undisclosed for a long time (yes, there is a connection between Y! and abuses).
Re:Yahoo has 22 million .jp users? (Score:4, Interesting)
Also, Google Japan is abysmal. You can set Google's language settings to "Japanese only", but you enter your search term in kanji, you inevitably end up getting back mostly Chinese hits. You have to add a hiragana character (I usually use hiragana "no") to your search term to get back Japanese hits.
Yahoo (back when they had their own independent search engine in Japan...they later switched to Bing and now I they're sadly using Google), Bing and others do not have this same issue nearly as badly as Google.
Plus Yahoo Japan actually has a pretty nice start page with access to dictionaries, etc.
Re:Yahoo has 22 million .jp users? (Score:5, Insightful)
Also, Google Japan is abysmal. You can set Google's language settings to "Japanese only", but you enter your search term in kanji, you inevitably end up getting back mostly Chinese hits. You have to add a hiragana character (I usually use hiragana "no") to your search term to get back Japanese hits.
I've been living in Japan since 2006 and never experienced this. Google Japan will return Japanese sites. It doesn't matter if I write in Kanji, Kana or any western Alphabet. My only complaint is when I'm looking for information in English(mostly programming stuff), I need to manually set up my Google settings to english both for language and locale, otherwise I will still get Japanese pages(and now that they decide to auto translate everything things got even worse). But for the average Japanese, I see no problem at all.
Re: Yahoo has 22 million .jp users? (Score:2)
Have you tried google.com/ncr ?
This will do a no country redirect and you will get google proper no matter where you are.
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I have stayed both inside and outside Japan in the last few years.
My experience is that, the search results seem to depend on both your locale settings and your IP.
Can Google confirm this?
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I have never experienced Google Japan returning Chinese sites regardless of characters I may be using, be it kanji, hiragana/katakana, or hell even english queries, and I have to frequently perform such queries...
Re: (Score:1)
I have Google set up to return English and Japanese results, and never had this specific problem, but two I do consistently get:
1) I search for something using English keywords, and the Japanese Wikipedia entry comes up (English entry nowhere in sight). That's probably Wikipedia's fault somehow. That, and
2) Whenever I search for anything that resembles a person's name (kanji) the first twenty odd results are name-based fortune telling sites.
Re: (Score:2)
There is a technical answer: most PCs come with Yahoo! stuff, the search is set to Y! and nobody changes that. The thing is, compared to the West, the Japanese do not have that "pursuit of genuineness" reaction - they trust what is popular and Y! is very popular...
Same in the west. Not only Google pays Mozilla and Apple to set their browsers default search engine to Google(let alone Chrome and Android influences) but they also got so integrated in society(To verb "to google" instead of "to search" being a primary example) that most people don't even bother searching for alternatives.
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most people don't even bother searching for alternatives.
Yahoo and Bing offer search results as impressive as Lycos, Hotbot and Altavista in the 1990s. In fact, as far as I can tell, Yahoo offers the same search results they did in the 1990s.
Bing could do a $100 million advertising campaign and it wouldn't help unless they take an interest in continually refining and improving their search results. No one "gave" the search engine market to Google, they slowly earned it.
Punctuation trap (Score:1)
Is there anybody else that read at first the title as if "Yahoo!" and "Japan" were actually in separate sentences?
Being so glad about stolen user IDs seemed *really* weird.
And? (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:And? (Score:4, Funny)
> So 20 million Yahoo user names are revealed. Why is that interesting at all?
This is almost as bad as the pin number leak the other week:
http://pastebin.com/2qbRKh3R [pastebin.com]
I've already changed my pin because of this; I guess a lot of Yahoo users will be changing their user names now.
Re: (Score:2)
Retitle "The UNtruth" (Score:1)
The smell of bullshit. (Score:2)
"According to Yahoo, the information that was stolen didn't have passwords or any other information that would allow unauthorized users to carry out user identity verification."
There is so much bullshit here that you could grow world-class pumpkins that you need a crane to lift on to the flatbed truck (being careful, because it can crack under its own weight, *and then your fscked.).
Yahoo has been terrible at keeping control of this stuff, like the *other* massive leak they had just a year ago.
I used to be
not nice (Score:1)
Yaay another Marissa Mayer story for CNN (Score:1)
Lean in, then fall in, on your ass.
darn (Score:2)